LCD videowall tiling refers to the process of arranging multiple individual LCD display panels together seamlessly to create a larger combined display.
This technique involves carefully aligning and configuring these panels to minimise or eliminate the visible bezels (the frames around each display) between them, thereby creating a more cohesive and unified visual output.
The tiling process typically involves:
Physical Alignment:
Positioning the LCD panels adjacent to each other in a grid-like formation to form the desired videowall size. Precision is crucial to ensure minimal gaps and an aligned display surface.
Using specialist videowall mounts, tools such as micro-adjust help to get the most accurate alignment
Bezel Compensation:
Adjusting the content displayed on each panel to compensate for the width of the bezels.
This can involve scaling, cropping, or overlapping content to create a more continuous image across the screens and reduce the impact of bezel interruptions.
Calibration:
Calibrating the colour, brightness, and other display settings across all panels to ensure uniformity and consistency in visual output.
This step helps in achieving a seamless viewing experience across the entire videowall.
Software Configuration:
Using specialised software or videowall controllers to manage the content distribution and display settings across the tiled LCD panels.
This software helps control the content layout, resolution, and synchronisation among the screens.
AVOIP Allows the software to be used on the local network, to easily redesign the layout and change inputs.
By effectively tiling and configuring the LCD panels, the goal is to create a virtually uninterrupted and visually immersive display, enabling a large-scale, high-resolution viewing experience without prominent visual breaks between the individual screens.