Display Interface Cables

Posted by SZFRS Engineering Team

Display interface cable selection used to be straightforward — LVDS for almost everything, plus a few HDMI and DVI variants for desktops. The display industry has fragmented since then. Modern laptops run eDP. 4K and 8K commercial signage runs V-by-One HS. AR and VR headsets run mixes of MIPI DSI, eDP, and proprietary high-speed FPC interfaces. Outdoor digital signage stretches HDMI and DisplayPort over 20-50 meters. Each interface has specific resolution ceilings, distance limits, and cost positions. Picking the right one matters more than it used to.

TL;DR — Quick Answer

LVDS still owns industrial HMI, lower-resolution signage, and POS terminal displays — proven, cheap, plenty of bandwidth for FHD and lower. eDP is the laptop and embedded display standard, replacing LVDS in nearly all modern notebooks and many embedded panels. V-by-One HS dominates 4K and 8K commercial signage and TVs — much higher bandwidth than LVDS, single cable runs to large panels. DisplayPort 2.1 leads desktop, professional AV, and high-end signage. HDMI 2.1 remains the consumer-facing standard for TVs and home theater. MIPI DSI dominates mobile, AR/VR, and small embedded displays. Each has a sweet spot; mismatching interface to application creates either capacity problems or unnecessary cost.

LVDS — Still Working After 25 Years

Low Voltage Differential Signaling has been the workhorse panel interface since the late 1990s. The signaling is reliable, the cables are cheap, and the connectors (LFH-60, DF13, DF14, JAE FI) have proven dependable across millions of installations. LVDS handles up to 1.95 Gbps per pair, which translates to FHD 1920×1080 at 60 Hz on dual-channel implementations. Some panels still use it for 2K resolution.

Where LVDS still wins: industrial HMI panels (5″-21″ touchscreens for factory floor), older medical equipment displays, POS terminal screens, ATM and kiosk interfaces, and lower-resolution digital signage (FHD and below). Distance support is good — 5 to 10 meters with proper cable construction. LVDS cable programs are some of our highest-volume product, especially for industrial HMI customers running 10-15 year product lifecycles where the panel hasn’t moved to eDP yet.

Where LVDS struggles: 4K and 8K resolution simply needs more bandwidth than LVDS can deliver in reasonable cable counts. Beyond FHD, alternative interfaces become necessary.

eDP — The New Laptop Standard

Embedded DisplayPort emerged from VESA in 2008 as a successor to LVDS specifically for laptops and embedded panels. Modern eDP v1.5 supports up to 32.4 Gbps total across four lanes, enough for 4K at 120 Hz or 5K at 60 Hz on a single cable. Lower-resolution panels run on one or two lanes at lower data rates, saving power.

Where eDP wins: nearly all modern laptops (since roughly 2018), high-resolution embedded panels, all-in-one PCs, professional medical monitors, and high-end industrial HMI moving toward 4K. Power management is built into the protocol — eDP can power-down lanes dynamically, which matters in battery-powered devices. eDP cable work has grown significantly as laptop OEMs standardized on the interface and as embedded panel makers shifted to it.

The connector ecosystem is fragmented — different laptop OEMs (HP, Dell, Lenovo, Apple) use different connector designs even when they share the eDP signaling. JAE FI series, I-PEX Cabline-CA, and IRISO connector families all show up in eDP applications. We work with the relevant connector for each program rather than pushing a single ecosystem.

V-by-One HS — The 4K/8K Signage Standard

V-by-One HS (High Speed) is the panel interface that displaced LVDS in commercial signage and TVs above FHD resolution. Developed by THine Electronics, it supports up to 4 Gbps per lane on standard implementations and 8 Gbps on the V-by-One US (Ultra Speed) variant — much higher per-lane bandwidth than LVDS. A single 8-lane V-by-One HS connector handles 4K at 60 Hz comfortably; 8K typically uses 16-lane implementations.

Where V-by-One HS wins: commercial digital signage (Samsung, LG, Sharp, NEC, BOE 4K/8K signage panels), large-format TVs, professional broadcast displays, video walls, and any display chain that needs to drive a 4K or 8K panel from a controller board to the panel itself. Cable runs are typically internal — within the display cabinet from main board to panel — but distances of 1-3 meters are common.

The interface is licensed (THine licenses to chipset vendors), which keeps the ecosystem fairly clean. Cable construction follows V-by-One HS specifications for impedance control (100 Ω differential), shielding, and length matching. We build V-by-One HS cables for digital signage manufacturers and broadcast equipment OEMs as a regular part of the display work.

DisplayPort 2.1 — Desktop and Pro AV

DisplayPort 2.1 (released 2022) supports up to 80 Gbps total bandwidth (UHBR 20 mode), enabling 8K at 60 Hz with HDR or 4K at 240+ Hz on a single cable. Earlier DP versions (1.4, 1.4a) topped out at 32.4 Gbps, similar to current eDP. The big bandwidth jump in DP 2.1 came from the UHBR (Ultra High Bit Rate) signaling modes inherited from Thunderbolt 3/4.

Where DisplayPort wins: gaming desktops, professional video editing workstations, multi-monitor productivity setups, high-refresh-rate gaming monitors, professional broadcast equipment, and high-end commercial signage where the connector needs to be user-accessible. The standard supports daisy-chaining (MST — Multi-Stream Transport), which simplifies multi-monitor wiring.

USB-C DP-Alt mode is the same underlying DisplayPort signaling running over USB-C connector contacts. Modern laptops, tablets, and AR/VR devices increasingly use USB-C DP-Alt rather than dedicated DisplayPort connectors. We build both flavors regularly — full-size DisplayPort cable assemblies for desktop programs and USB-C DP-Alt for portable and AR/VR programs.

HDMI 2.1 — Consumer-Facing Standard

HDMI 2.1 supports up to 48 Gbps via FRL (Fixed Rate Link) signaling, enabling 4K at 120 Hz, 8K at 60 Hz, and dynamic HDR. The connector is the dominant consumer interface for TVs, set-top boxes, gaming consoles, and home theater. Distance support over passive copper is moderate — typically 3-5 meters at full bandwidth, longer with active cables (AOC) or fiber.

HDMI is less common in our work than the other interfaces because most of our display cable programs are internal-to-cabinet (V-by-One HS, eDP, LVDS) rather than external user-facing. When HDMI shows up, it’s typically for outdoor digital signage requiring 20-50 meter runs (active HDMI cable territory), professional AV installations, or broadcast equipment input/output. The HDMI Forum certification process for licensed cable assemblies adds compliance overhead — most of our HDMI work uses certified components rather than us seeking primary HDMI Adopter Agreement status.

MIPI DSI — Mobile and AR/VR

MIPI DSI (Display Serial Interface) dominates smartphones, AR/VR headsets, automotive dashboards, and small embedded displays. The current MIPI D-PHY v2.5 supports up to 4.5 Gbps per lane; C-PHY supports higher rates with different signaling. Multi-lane implementations (typically 4 lanes) deliver enough bandwidth for current AR/VR display demands.

Where MIPI DSI dominates: smartphone displays (every modern phone), AR/VR headsets (Meta Quest, Apple Vision Pro, PICO, ByteDance VR products), automotive infotainment and dashboard displays, smartwatches, small embedded panels, and increasingly handheld game consoles. The interface uses extremely fine-pitch connectors and FPC routing inside compact devices. Custom FPC work for MIPI DSI applications is a growing segment, especially for AR/VR programs.

Side-by-Side Comparison Table

InterfaceMax BandwidthMax Resolution TypicalDistanceWhere It Wins
LVDS (dual-channel)3.9 GbpsFHD 1920×1080 @ 60 Hz5-10 mIndustrial HMI, POS, lower-res signage
eDP v1.532.4 Gbps4K @ 120 Hz0.5-2 mLaptops, embedded high-res panels
V-by-One HS (8 lane)32 Gbps4K @ 60 Hz1-3 m internalCommercial signage, large TV
V-by-One US (16 lane)128 Gbps8K @ 60 Hz1-3 m internal8K signage, broadcast displays
DisplayPort 1.4a32.4 Gbps4K @ 120 Hz2-5 m passiveDesktop, gaming monitors
DisplayPort 2.1 (UHBR 20)80 Gbps8K @ 60 Hz HDR1-3 m passivePro AV, high-end gaming
HDMI 2.148 Gbps8K @ 60 Hz3-5 m passive, 50 m+ AOCConsumer TV, signage exterior
MIPI DSI D-PHY 2.518 Gbps (4 lane)4K @ 60 Hz0.1-0.3 m FPCMobile, AR/VR, automotive
USB-C DP-Alt40-80 Gbps4K-8K depending on mode1-2 m passiveModern laptops, AR/VR portable

Application Selection Framework

ApplicationRecommended InterfaceReasoning
Industrial HMI 7″-21″LVDSProven, cheap, sufficient for FHD
Laptop modern (2020+)eDPIndustry standard, power management
Digital signage indoor 4KV-by-One HSBandwidth + signage ecosystem
Digital signage outdoor 4KV-by-One HS internal + HDMI/DP externalCabinet-internal V-by-One; external for input
8K signage / TVV-by-One US 16-laneBandwidth requirement
AR/VR headset displayMIPI DSI or proprietary FPCCompact form factor, high refresh
POS terminal customer displayLVDS or eDPFHD typical, cost-driven
Self-service kioskeDP or LVDSResolution-driven choice
Medical aesthetics handpieceLVDS or proprietarySmall panel, cost-driven
Medical imaging displayDisplayPort 1.4a or eDP4K diagnostic resolution
Gaming desktop monitorDisplayPort 2.1High refresh rate support
Consumer TVHDMI 2.1Consumer ecosystem standard
Automotive dashboard displayMIPI DSICompact form factor, automotive proven
Drone FPV monitorHDMI or DisplayPortExternal user device

A Common Mistake — Specifying Yesterday’s Interface

The most frequent display cable spec error we see is older interfaces being specified out of habit. A new product specifies LVDS because the previous generation used it, even though the new panel actually shipped with eDP support. A new 4K signage program specifies LVDS because the engineering team is more familiar with it, even though FHD-cap LVDS won’t drive the panel. Display interfaces have evolved faster than most engineering teams’ instincts; checking the current panel datasheet against current cable interface options usually saves cost or unlocks performance.

The opposite mistake — over-specifying to the latest interface when the application doesn’t need it — also wastes money. A 1080p industrial HMI doesn’t need DisplayPort 2.1; LVDS works fine and costs a fraction. A POS terminal customer display doesn’t need V-by-One HS; standard LVDS handles the FHD resolution at lower cost.

Bottom Line

Display interface selection should follow panel capability and application requirement, not engineering team familiarity. LVDS for FHD and below in industrial and POS. eDP for laptops and high-res embedded. V-by-One for 4K and 8K signage. DisplayPort for desktop and pro AV. HDMI for consumer-facing. MIPI DSI for mobile, AR/VR, and automotive. Match interface to use case and the cost-performance balance lands in the right place automatically.

Related Reading


Need Help Selecting Display Cable?

Send us your panel datasheet and the application — signage, AR/VR, laptop, HMI, or other. We’ll match interface and cable construction to your panel and quote within 48 hours.

Similar Posts