oled or lcd screen in stock
OLED is a display technology that enables thin, efficient, flexible and bright displays, TVs and lighting devices. OLED displays offer the world"s best image quality - and enable flexible, foldable and rollable displays (see more here - What is OLED?).
The OLED market is already a multi-billion dollar market, led by Samsung, LG Display, BOE and others. It is estimated that OLED displays generated around $40 billion in revenues in 2021 and the market is expected to continue growing in the future.
There are dozens of companies developing and producing OLEDs, from display makers such as Samsung, LG and BOE to smaller R&D startups and IP companies.
For public investors interested in the OLED market, there are several good options, includingLUniversal Display Corporation: UDC is an OLED pioneer, and holds many of the key patents in the industry (mostly around efficient phosphorescent OLED emitters). Virtually all AMOLED displays on the market adopt UDC"s PHOLED materials, and the company experienced very fast growth in revenue in recent years. Universal Display"s stock ticker is OLED, you can see the OLED share price here.
eMagin: eMagin is an OLED microdisplay pioneer, and has been developing and producing such displays for many years, focusing on the defense market and recently also on the consumer VR/AR market. eMagin"s stock ticker at the NYSE is EMAN.
OLED display makers: OLED display makers can be a good investment opportunity - especially companies that have a focus on OLED displays - such as Samsung Display (held by Samsung Electronics), LG display, Visionox, BOE Display and more.
OLED equipment makers: There are several public equipment companies (for example Aixtron, or Coherent) that offer OLED production systems. These companies could be a good investment opportunity to investors who believes a new wave of OLED capacity expansion is near.
Universal Display Corporation (NASDAQ:OLED) is an interesting business in the OLED space - as the company"s symbol suggests. OLEDs are organic light-emitting diodes, which are used for displays and other lighting products. OLEDs are part of a growing marketas the pricing for the technology which was once astronomical, has steadily gone down to more affordable levels.
The technology is capturing market share in segments like phones, TVs, wearables, tablets, notebooks and PCs, AR, VR, and portable media devices. Automotive sectors have also been a new adopter of OLED technologies.
The company believes that OLED technology offers advantages of efficiency, contrast ratio advantages, viewing angles, video responses, form factors, and the recent advantage of an actual manufacturing cost.
The company believes that OLEDs will display most display technologies that are currently in use. OLED has over 20 years of experience in the business of working with manufacturers and believes this will help the business capture significant future market share.
The company Universal Display Corporation is in the business of developing new OLED materials, and then sellingexisting and new materials to manufacturers for display applications. OLED produces the material - then sells it to product manufacturers.
Aside from this the company also develops as well as licenses its portfolio of proprietary OLED materials, device design patents/form factors and its manufacturing technologies. The company has a large portfolio of fully proprietary OLED technologies and materials which have been attained through internal company research and developments.
OLED, to date, has over 5,500 patents issued and pending across the world. It owns a powerful portfolio. It"s also completely fabless, meaning it carries only very limited overall asset risk.
The company uses Energy-efficient Phosphorescent materials called UniversalPHOLED emitters, which do not use any conflict materials. OLED has zero debt, and a net cash position of almost $850M, including cash/equivalents and long-term investments. It has one of the strongest balance sheets in the sector and can be considered fundamentally sound.
The company"s business model can therefore be said to consist of Revenues, through its license, royalty fees, and material sales. It"s also a technology enabler, through direct patent licensing of PHOLED Emitters &% Hosts, and it"s a researcher, with Device & Architecture IP"s.
The advantages of OLEDs over other technologies are strong. The technology offers a 75% cumulative reduction in power consumption, better image, thinner, wider viewing angle, better blacks and contracts, real-time video speeds, Low UV output, and a minimal bezel. The technology can also be made flexible.
It requires less manufacturing than comparative technologies, doesn"t require a backlight, color filters, or liquid crystals, and enables non-glass-based substrates.
OLED is an interesting investment, to say the least. Its 20-year returns are absolutely superb at 11.7% annualized for the 20-year period. But at the same time, this company has spent the lion"s share of the past 4-6 years at crazy type valuations of P/E"s up to 60-80X - in short, exactly the sort of company I"d want you to avoid if you"re a conservative investor. In the past year alone, the company has lost almost 60% of its market cap as the stock has completely crashed from what I viewed as completely uninvestable overvaluation.
Those are some hefty expectations, and if they realize, I have no issue paying a premium for such earnings growth. More about that in the company valuation segment.
OLED has very strong partnerships across the world. Most relevant players are using the company"s products in one way or another, as we can see on this list.
Furthermore, the company"s historical performance indicates that the future here is rosy, with revenue close to doubling in less than 6 years. Income was relatively flat between 2017-2020, but really took off in 2021, when OLED started to take off in turn.
OLED is a high-margin business with a fabless, lean operating model. It"s the largest phosphorescent OLED technology and materials portfolio in the world with thousands of patents, and one of the most robust customer relationship bases out there, working directly, boots-on-the-ground with more than 25 major businesses around the globe.
Furthermore, the company does most of its research at its US-based testing facility in Ewing, NJ. The company owns more than 50,000 feet of space here and works with research, optimization, and prototyping.
The combined upside of the OLED technology, the future market size, and this company"s market share, prospective and actual, is what makes this company a potentially interesting buy here. OLED has already proven that it"s able to deliver significant earnings growth. For the past 14 years, it"s been growing its EPS by an average of 42.5% (though there is some up and down here).
The company id does not have the most solid sort of dividend historically, but has been growing steadily since 2017 now, to where we can say that the company dividend is actually "respectable".
You know me - give me 50-80X P/E and I"ll give you the boot. I won"t be caught dead investing at those multiples, no matter what business you"re peddling. That"s why I was opposed to investing in OLED a year ago when a reader asked me specifically about the company.
OLED now trades at an average weighted P/E of 24X. That"s within the parameters that I will buy certain businesses. With the growth rates we"re expecting from OLED, this is not at all outside of the realm of possibility. In fact, based on its growth rate as a P/E ratio, the company is trading very closely to "fair value", if you believe that the business should average its growth ratio.
Because if this is the case, and if you believe in this upside, we can see an upside of 18.6% annually to a 2024E 21.88X P/E. Even if the company were to continue declining, you won"t be losing money based on the company"s current forecasts and a 15X forward P/E based on this forecast, even if that upside is only 6% for the next few years.
There are a few downsides to this forecast though. The forecast accuracy for OLED is pretty terrible. The company has a strong history, not of outperforming, but of underperforming. OLED has a strong tendency, around 62% on a 1-year basis and 77% on a 2-year basis with a 10% and 20% MoE respectively, of missing forecasts. So those positive 10-20% growth rates are subject to those miss ratios.
S&P Global gives the company a target range of $105 up to $253. What this means is that no matter how low you want to value this company, or agree with these analysts, even the lower-range price targets are currently above where the company is trading. The S&P Global average for OLED is at around $177/share, with 9 of 11 analysts following the company at either a "BUY" or an "Outperform".
The bullish thesis for the company is based on a reversion based on strong market trends, including contract negotiations with large consumers, technology expertise, and continued valuation pressure that is really unrelated to the company"s actual performance. Yes, the company was overvalued for a long time - but it"s recently been caught in the sell-off.
My thesis for the company is the following: Universal Display Corporation is a market leader in a recession and future-resistant segment in display technology. Typically overvalued, the company has dropped 50%+ in less than a year.
At a 1.2% yield and a current earnings-based upside of 18% annualized, it"s fair to say at this point that OLED is no longer overvalued. It"s now down, according to some, at fair value, and according to me, at a decent potential upside.
Remember, I"m all about : Buying undervalued - even if that undervaluation is slight, and not mind-numbingly massive - companies at a discount, allowing them to normalize over time and harvesting capital gains and dividends in the meantime.
If the company goes well beyond normalization and goes into overvaluation, I harvest gains and rotate my position into other undervalued stocks, repeating #1.
There are plenty of new and confusing terms facing TV shoppers today, but when it comes down to the screen technology itself, there are only two: Nearly every TV sold today is either LCD or OLED.
The biggest between the two is in how they work. With OLED, each pixel provides its own illumination so there"s no separate backlight. With an LCD TV, all of the pixels are illuminated by an LED backlight. That difference leads to all kinds of picture quality effects, some of which favor LCD, but most of which benefit OLED.
LCDs are made by a number of companies across Asia. All current OLED TVs are built by LG Display, though companies like Sony and Vizio buy OLED panels from LG and then use their own electronics and aesthetic design.
So which one is better? Read on for their strengths and weaknesses. In general we"ll be comparing OLED to the best (read: most expensive) LCD has to offer, mainly because there"s no such thing as a cheap OLED TV (yet).
Take this category with a grain of salt. Both TV types are very bright and can look good in even a sunny room, let alone more moderate indoor lighting situations or the dark rooms that make TV images look their best. When it comes down to it, no modern TV could ever be considered "dim."
At the other side of light output is black level, or how dark the TV can get. OLED wins here because of its ability to turn off individual pixels completely. It can produce truly perfect black.
The better LCDs have local dimming, where parts of the screen can dim independently of others. This isn"t quite as good as per-pixel control because the black areas still aren"t absolutely black, but it"s better than nothing. The best LCDs have full-array local dimming, which provides even finer control over the contrast of what"s onscreen -- but even they can suffer from "blooming," where a bright area spoils the black of an adjacent dark area.
Here"s where it comes together. Contrast ratio is the difference between the brightest and the darkest a TV can be. OLED is the winner here because it can get extremely bright, plus it can produce absolute black with no blooming. It has the best contrast ratio of any modern display.
Contrast ratio is the most important aspect of picture quality. A high contrast-ratio display will look more realistic than one with a lower contrast ratio.
One of the main downsides of LCD TVs is a change in picture quality if you sit away from dead center (as in, off to the sides). How much this matters to you certainly depends on your seating arrangement, but also on how much you love your loved ones.
A few LCDs use in-plane switching (IPS) panels, which have better off-axis picture quality than other kinds of LCDs, but don"t look as good as other LCDs straight on (primarily due to a lower contrast ratio).
OLED doesn"t have the off-axis issue LCDs have; its image looks basically the same, even from extreme angles. So if you have a wide seating area, OLED is the better option.
Nearly all current TVs are HDR compatible, but that"s not the entire story. Just because a TV claims HDR compatibility doesn"t mean it can accurately display HDR content. All OLED TVs have the dynamic range to take advantage of HDR, but lower-priced LCDs, especially those without local-dimming backlights, do not. So if you want to see HDR content it all its dynamic, vibrant beauty, go for OLED or an LCD with local dimming.
In our tests comparing the best new OLED and LCD TVs with HDR games and movies, OLED usually looks better. Its superior contrast and lack of blooming win the day despite LCD"s brightness advantage. In other words LCD TVs can get brighter, especially in full-screen bright scenes and HDR highlights, but none of them can control that illumination as precisely as an OLED TV.
OLED"s energy consumption is directly related to screen brightness. The brighter the screen, the more power it draws. It even varies with content. A dark movie will require less power than a hockey game or ski competition.
The energy consumption of LCD varies depending on the backlight setting. The lower the backlight, the lower the power consumption. A basic LED LCD with its backlight set low will draw less power than OLED.
LG has said their OLED TVs have a lifespan of 100,000 hours to half brightness, a figure that"s similar to LED LCDs. Generally speaking, all modern TVs are quite reliable.
Does that mean your new LCD or OLED will last for several decades like your parent"s last CRT (like the one pictured). Probably not, but then, why would you want it to? A 42-inch flat panel cost $14,000 in the late 90"s, and now a 65-inch TV with more than 16x the resolution and a million times better contrast ratio costs $1,400. Which is to say, by the time you"ll want/need to replace it, there will be something even better than what"s available now, for less money.
OLED TVs are available in sizes from 48 to 88 inches, but LCD TVs come in smaller and larger sizes than that -- with many more choices in between -- so LCD wins. At the high end of the size scale, however, the biggest "TVs" don"t use either technology.
If you want something even brighter, and don"t mind spending a literal fortune to get it, Samsung, Sony, and LG all sell direct-view LED displays. In most cases these are
You can get 4K resolution, 50-inch LCDs for around $400 -- or half that on sale. It"s going to be a long time before OLEDs are that price, but they have come down considerably.
LCD dominates the market because it"s cheap to manufacture and delivers good enough picture quality for just about everybody. But according to reviews at CNET and elsewhere, OLED wins for overall picture quality, largely due to the incredible contrast ratio. The price difference isn"t as severe as it used to be, and in the mid- to high-end of the market, there are lots of options.
Organic light-emitting diode screens are showing up everywhere, from midrange smartphones to top-shelf TV sets. And OLED researcher and materials reseller Universal Display is a high-octane growth stock, having doubled its sales in five years. In its last quarter, revenue rose 12% year over year, with management noting that it’s “broadening our core competencies, bolstering our worldwide footprint and expanding our global team.”
Universal Display is also a highly efficient cash machine, pocketing $170 million of free cash flow over the last four quarters based on top-line sales of $570 million. That works out to a cash-based profit margin of 29.8%, topping the 27.4% margin for one of Universal Display’s most important customers: iPhone maker Apple.
Meanwhile, its balance sheet is clean, recently sporting $727 million in cash and available equivalents, with no long-term debt. The company is committed to returning excess cash to shareholders, and its dividend yield was recently 1%.
If you invest in Universal Display, you’re getting a relatively small company with massive growth opportunities. Oh, and the stock was recently down 50% from its 52-week high, as nervous investors backed away from seemingly risky growth stocks. In other words, Universal Display is trading at fire sale prices, when the underlying business seems very sound. What’s not to love? (The Motley Fool has recommended Universal Display.)
The Fool responds:Not necessarily. Instead, you might just figure out what portion of your assets you want to invest in bonds and stick with that until you have a reason to change your asset allocation, such as if five or more years have passed since you set it up, and you’re older now.
Younger folks might keep all or most of their assets in stocks if they have several decades of investing ahead of them. Those in or nearing retirement might move a larger portion of assets into bonds.
One rule of thumb suggests subtracting your age from the number 110 to arrive at a good allocation for stocks. So if you’re 40, you’d park 70% of your assets in stocks. If you can tolerate more risk, it’s fair to subtract from 120, instead, for a higher stock allocation. Remember that over long periods, stocks have generally outperformed bonds.
It can seem reassuring if an actively managed mutual fund that you’re considering is massive — meaning that many investors have trusted lots of money to it. But managers of big funds face challenges.
As fund managers become more successful, delivering strong returns for their shareholders, more dollars will likely come their way. They’ll collect more in fees, but they’ll also have to find additional promising investments for that money. Ideally, they will invest in the best, most lucrative securities they can find. But they can’t always put as much as they want into any one stock.
Most funds managers want their funds to be classified as “diversified,” so they’re required by law to have at least 75% of fund assets invested in no more than 5% of any particular issuer’s securities. Even if they’re extremely bullish on, say, six different stocks and want to invest 10% of fund assets in each, they can’t. For better or worse, they can’t make huge bets on any particular stocks. Therefore, they end up investing in their best ideas, and their next best ideas, and plenty of securities that are far from the top of their list.
The Fidelity Contrafund, for example, had spread its assets across 344 different securities as of late March. In late April, it had nearly $1 billion invested in Home Depot stock, but that made up only 0.854% of fund assets. Only 18 holdings made up more than 1% of assets.
How has Fidelity’s Contrafund performed? Well, on an after-tax basis, it has lagged its benchmark index over the past three, five and 10 years — so investors would have been better off with a low-fee S&P 500 index fund.
Research actively managed mutual funds well before buying. Consider not only their performance over many years, but also fees and factors such as their managers’ tenure.
For practical retirement guidance and model portfolios featuring recommended funds, check out our “Rule Your Retirement” service at Fool.com/services.
From M.J.K., online:My dumbest investment move has been trading too frequently in certain stocks. For example, I rode Tesla until its 5-for-1 stock split in 2020, selling at around $480 per share. I then bought shares again at $550. That’s a gain of $70 per share that I missed out on. So now I’ll keep those shares no matter what.
After that Tesla education, I went back to school with another stock: I bought and sold it for gains of between $20 and $30 per share a few times. Then the other day, I sold it for a $40 gain. And once again, it’s gone up even more. So I bought it back and I swear I’ll not sell it again. I hope I’ve learned my lesson this time, but I suspect I’ll need another reminder or two.
The Fool responds:Maybe you can avoid making this mistake again: Next time, before you sell, ask yourself what you think the company’s long-term growth potential is. If you can see it continuing to grow over many years, consider hanging on, so you have the chance to enjoy much bigger long-term gains.
Selling before you’ve owned a stock for more than a year will also subject you to the short-term capital gains tax rate, which is the same as your ordinary income tax rate — and very likely higher than most people’s long-term capital gains tax rate of 15%.
I’m the product of a 2018 merger between two optical giants, one of which was established in France in 1849, and the other launched in Italy in 1961. The latter name is dominant in the frame business, while the former is a lens-making titan. Some of my brands are Ray-Ban, Oakley, Oliver Peoples and Costa del Mar. My licensed brands include Giorgio Armani, Coach, Bulgari, Prada and Tiffany. My retail network has more than 9,000 stores worldwide, with names such as LensCrafters, Pearle Vision and Sunglass Hut. I’m vertically integrated, handling everything from design to manufacturing to distribution. Who am I?
The tools it came with didn"t work very well, especially the screwdriver to remove the first two screws at the bottom, so I had to get my own. With that said, the installation was pretty easy, I"d never changed an iPhone screen before but I just followed a youtube tutorial. The screen works great at 100% capacity functionality wise, I haven"t noticed anything that doesn"t work yet. The only thing I would say besides the tools not working well, is that the color is off, but for the price, I was expecting it to be a little off, and I don"t have another replacement screen to compare it to.
PO Box, APO/FPO, Africa, Anguilla, Antigua and Barbuda, Aruba, Asia, Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, Bermuda, British Virgin Islands, Cayman Islands, Costa Rica, Dominica, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Europe, French Guiana, French Polynesia, Greenland, Grenada, Guadeloupe, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Jamaica, Libya, Martinique, Mexico, Middle East, Montserrat, Netherlands Antilles, New Caledonia, Nicaragua, Oceania, Panama, Reunion, Russian Federation, Saint Kitts-Nevis, Saint Lucia, Saint Pierre and Miquelon, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, South America, Southeast Asia, Trinidad and Tobago, Turks and Caicos Islands, Ukraine, Venezuela
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OLED displays have higher contrast ratios (1 million : 1 static compared with 1,000 : 1 for LCD screens), deeper blacks and lower power consumption compared with LCD displays. They also have greater color accuracy. However, they are more expensive, and blue OLEDs have a shorter lifetime.
OLED displays offer a much better viewing angle. In contrast, viewing angle is limited with LCD displays. And even inside the supported viewing angle, the quality of the picture on an LCD screen is not consistent; it varies in brightness, contrast, saturation and hue by variations in posture of the viewer.
There are no geographical constraints with OLED screens. LCD screens, on the other hand, lose contrast in high temperature environments, and lose brightness and speed in low temperature environments.
Blue OLEDs degrade more rapidly than the materials that produce other colors. Because of this, the manufacturers of these displays often compensate by calibrating the colors in a way that oversaturates the them and adds a bluish tint to the screen.
With current technology, OLED displays use more energy than backlit LCDs when displaying light colors. While OLED displays have deeper blacks compared with backlit LCD displays, they have dimmer whites.
LCDs use liquid crystals that twist and untwist in response to an electric charge and are lit by a backlight. When a current runs through them, they untwist to let through a specific amount of light. They are then paired with color filters to create the display.
AMOLED (Active-Matrix Organic Light-Emitting Diode) is a different form of OLED used in some mobile phones, media players and digital cameras. It offers higher refresh rates with OLEDs and consume a lot less power, making them good for portable electronics. However, they are difficult to view in direct sunlight. Products with AMOLED screens include Galaxy Nexus, Galaxy S II, HTC Legend and PlayStation Vita.
A liquid-crystal display (LCD) is a flat-panel display or other electronically modulated optical device that uses the light-modulating properties of liquid crystals. Liquid crystals do not emit light directly, instead using a backlight or reflector to produce images in color or monochrome. LCDs are available to display arbitrary images (as in a general-purpose computer display) or fixed images with low information content, which can be displayed or hidden, such as preset words, digits, and seven-segment displays, as in a digital clock. They use the same basic technology, except that arbitrary images are made up of a large number of small pixels, while other displays have larger elements. LCDs can either be normally on (positive) or off (negative), depending on the polarizer arrangement. For example, a character positive LCD with a backlight will have black lettering on a background that is the color of the backlight, and a character negative LCD will have a black background with the letters being of the same color as the backlight. Optical filters are added to white on blue LCDs to give them their characteristic appearance.
LCDs are used in a wide range of applications, including LCD televisions, computer monitors, instrument panels, aircraft cockpit displays, and indoor and outdoor signage. Small LCD screens are common in portable consumer devices such as digital cameras, watches, calculators, and mobile telephones, including smartphones. LCD screens are also used on consumer electronics products such as DVD players, video game devices and clocks. LCD screens have replaced heavy, bulky cathode ray tube (CRT) displays in nearly all applications. LCD screens are available in a wider range of screen sizes than CRT and plasma displays, with LCD screens available in sizes ranging from tiny digital watches to very large television receivers. LCDs are slowly being replaced by OLEDs, which can be easily made into different shapes, and have a lower response time, wider color gamut, virtually infinite color contrast and viewing angles, lower weight for a given display size and a slimmer profile (because OLEDs use a single glass or plastic panel whereas LCDs use two glass panels; the thickness of the panels increases with size but the increase is more noticeable on LCDs) and potentially lower power consumption (as the display is only "on" where needed and there is no backlight). OLEDs, however, are more expensive for a given display size due to the very expensive electroluminescent materials or phosphors that they use. Also due to the use of phosphors, OLEDs suffer from screen burn-in and there is currently no way to recycle OLED displays, whereas LCD panels can be recycled, although the technology required to recycle LCDs is not yet widespread. Attempts to increase the lifespan of LCDs are quantum dot displays, which offer similar performance as an OLED display, but the Quantum dot sheet that gives these displays their characteristics can not yet be recycled.
Since LCD screens do not use phosphors, they rarely suffer image burn-in when a static image is displayed on a screen for a long time, e.g., the table frame for an airline flight schedule on an indoor sign. LCDs are, however, susceptible to image persistence. The LCD screen is more energy-efficient and can be disposed of more safely than a CRT can. Its low electrical power consumption enables it to be used in battery-powered electronic equipment more efficiently than CRTs can be. By 2008, annual sales of televisions with LCD screens exceeded sales of CRT units worldwide, and the CRT became obsolete for most purposes.
Our company specializes in developing solutions that arerenowned across the globe and meet expectations of the most demanding customers. Orient Display can boast incredibly fast order processing - usually it takes us only 4-5 weeks to produce LCD panels and we do our best to deliver your custom display modules, touch screens or TFT and IPS LCD displays within 5-8 weeks. Thanks to being in the business for such a noteworthy period of time, experts working at our display store have gained valuable experience in the automotive, appliances, industrial, marine, medical and consumer electronics industries. We’ve been able to create top-notch, specialized factories that allow us to manufacture quality custom display solutions at attractive prices. Our products comply with standards such as ISO 9001, ISO 14001, QC 080000, ISO/TS 16949 and PPM Process Control. All of this makes us the finest display manufacturer in the market.
Without a shadow of a doubt, Orient Display stands out from other custom display manufacturers. Why? Because we employ 3600 specialists, includingmore than 720 engineers that constantly research available solutions in order to refine strategies that allow us to keep up with the latest technologiesand manufacture the finest displays showing our innovative and creative approach. We continuously strive to improve our skills and stay up to date with the changing world of displays so that we can provide our customers with supreme, cutting-edge solutions that make their lives easier and more enjoyable.
Customer service is another element we are particularly proud of. To facilitate the pre-production and product development process, thousands of standard solutions are stored in our warehouses. This ensures efficient order realization which is a recipe to win the hearts of customers who chose Orient Display. We always go to great lengths to respond to any inquiries and questions in less than 24 hours which proves that we treat buyers with due respect.
Choosing services offered by Orient Display equals a fair, side-by-side cooperation between the customer and our specialists. In each and every project, we strive to develop the most appropriate concepts and prototypes that allow us to seamlessly deliver satisfactory end-products. Forget about irritating employee turnover - with us, you will always work with a prepared expert informed about your needs.
In a nutshell, Orient Display means 18% of global market share for automotive touch screen displays, emphasis on innovation, flexibility and customer satisfaction.Don"t wait and see for yourself that the game is worth the candle!
The new line of 3.5” TFT displays with IPS technology is now available! Three touchscreen options are available: capacitive, resistive, or without a touchscreen.
For over 20 years Newhaven Display has been one of the most trusted suppliers in the digital display industry. We’ve earned this reputation by providing top quality products, services, and custom design solutions to customers worldwide.
How do we do it? Our agile workforce – from engineers and developers to supply chain experts – work together to respond quickly to a dynamically changing market, customizing solutions to fit each customer’s unique requirements.
The clear plastic front camera and sensor holder and the earpiece speaker assembly are not included. These parts will need to be transferred from your original screen.
The sensor assembly on the back of the display is paired to your iPhone"s logic board and must be transferred from your old display to your new one. The sensor assembly includes the flood illuminator, a part of the Face ID security feature. If it is damaged or replaced, Face ID will cease to function.