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Uhh, that's not "seamlessly blending two displays", that's just having two desplays. If you've seen photos of planes, they don't just have an empty screen next to a working one anywhere.


Ah, I misunderstood - it's not uncommon to have those "big" screens also put together from two different screens side by side.


This is actually what I meant by "merged together". They are two separate displays controlled by separate computers, with separate power supplies etc. During normal mode operation they're synchronized somehow and can draw a large image over the entire display area, but in emergency mode you can display crucial flight data on only one of them if the other stop working.

I have never really thought much about it, but I guess the actual LCD thingie is manufactured in one piece and the control signals just being split between different computers somehow, but I don't know anything about how these things are made! :)


Here's a paper on a redundant display for military aircraft. Each LCD panel has redundant inputs, driver circuits, and power supplies. The two displays are built on a single LCD substrate, so there is no line between the two. https://www.mrcy.com/resourcehub/displays/dual-redundant-dis... https://www.mrcy.com/legacy_assets/siteassets/product-datash...




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