DFRobot
DFR1262 6.67-inch Flexible AMOLED Display with HDMI Driver
· MPN: DFR1262
This 6.67-inch flexible AMOLED panel is made for curved, form-fitting display prototypes where a rigid screen will not suit the design. Its bendable substrat...
Get notified when back in stock
This 6.67-inch flexible AMOLED panel is made for curved, form-fitting display prototypes where a rigid screen will not suit the design. Its bendable substrate keeps the module very thin, with a maximum thickness of just 1.2mm.
The display runs at a native 2400x1080 (SPR) resolution with 450cd/m² brightness and 16.7M colours, making it suitable for crisp UI elements, video, graphics and high-contrast visual feedback. AMOLED technology also allows deep blacks without a separate backlight.
For faster prototyping, the kit includes a dedicated MIPI-to-HDMI driver board. This provides a standard HDMI input for use with popular single-board computers such as LattePanda and Raspberry Pi, helping you validate display output without custom MIPI bring-up work.
It is well suited to wearable smart devices, curved screen prototypes, humanoid robot facial displays, automotive centre console concepts, portable medical terminals and other compact HMI projects.
Features:
- 6.67-inch AM-OLED panel, ultra-thin and bendable at only 1.2mm thick
- 2400x1080 high-definition resolution with 450cd/m² brightness for vivid visuals
- Includes MIPI-to-HDMI driver board, compatible with LattePanda and Raspberry Pi
Specifications:
- Screen Size: 6.67 inches
- Resolution: 2400x1080 (SPR)
- Screen Material: AM-OLED
- Brightness: 450cd/m²
- Frequency: 50Hz
- Aspect Ratio: 20:9
- Viewing Angle: 85°
- Display Colors: 16.7M
- Display Area: 154.56 x 69.552mm
- Dimensions: 162.56 x 74.46mm
- Maximum Thickness: 1.2mm
- Driver IC: ICNA3511A
- Driver Voltage: 3.3-5V
- Interface: MIPI-40Pin
- Operating Temperature: -20°C~60°C
Supplied as one 6.67-inch flexible AMOLED display module for embedded display development and curved interface prototyping.
Jargon buster
Plain-language definitions for the technical terms used above.
- HDMI
- HDMI is a common digital video and audio connection used by computers, media players, and many displays. If a display kit has HDMI input, it is usually much easier to test with a single-board computer because it can act like a normal monitor.
- HMI
- HMI stands for Human-Machine Interface, meaning the screen, buttons or controls a person uses to interact with a device. Describing something as suited to HMI use suggests it is intended for user-facing applications such as control panels, dashboards or instrument displays.
- ICNA3511A
- The ICNA3511A is a display driver IC designed to drive AMOLED panels, handling the timing and signalling needed to light the display's pixels. When a panel or screen lists this driver, the controlling board or interface must be compatible with it for the display to work.
- MIPI
- MIPI is a high-speed display and camera interface often used inside phones, tablets, and embedded devices. It matters because raw MIPI displays usually need special driver hardware or software support, unlike plug-and-play HDMI screens.
- OLED
- OLED stands for organic light-emitting diode, a display type where each pixel produces its own light. It matters because OLED screens are thin, high-contrast and easy to read for small status displays, but they can be more sensitive to image burn-in than some other display types.
Find this product in
Displays & Screens
Supplier page — dfrobot.com
Supplier Description · 923.0 KB · Click any page to view full size
Related Tutorials
Free guides on learn.littlebird.com.au