Why Blue Light Display?

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Again why on modern stereo quipment. It's easier to see? It's the only thing I don't like about my Denon 777. I highly dislike the blue display. Any quality units besides Yamaha, and Pioneer that use something other than blue. I really like the red display, with green mode display colors on the Yamaha CD 2. Very appealing.
 
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Pure speculation but, IMNSO, blue tends to be a more restful color, particularly in the dark. Green comes close, but blue beats it.

Heck, if it's good enough for the classics from Marantz and McIntosh, I guess it's good enough for me. And, it shore looks purty.
 
It's because they can... Speaking for myself, I'm not especially fond of the new blue LED's, which tend to be poorly diffused and glaringly bright. The old-time blue incandescent light (from an old Mac or Marantz) is much more tolerable, but when combined with very small black legends as they tend to on power/Vu meters, it's not especially appealing.

My favorite lighting (so far) has been the subtle sea-foam green (with high contrast black and white) from my Sansui TU-7900. Otherwise, I prefer the old-fashioned warm glow of mini-lamps.
 
I am not talking about 70's gear. I am talking about 80's on equipment with digital displays. Yes JVC did have a digital display on some 70's gear, and so did another well known manufacturer that I can't think of at the moment. Revox had a digital display that was red on some of their esoteric receivers from the late 70's. But none of this is what I was referring to.
 
It's because they can... Speaking for myself, I'm not especially fond of the new blue LED's, which tend to be poorly diffused and glaringly bright. The old-time blue incandescent light (from an old Mac or Marantz) is much more tolerable, but when combined with very small black legends as they tend to on power/Vu meters, it's not especially appealing.

My favorite lighting (so far) has been the
subtle sea-foam green
(with high contrast black and white) from my Sansui TU-7900. Otherwise, I prefer the old-fashioned warm glow of mini-lamps.

I have Harman Kardon Citation gear that has those green colors. I also like that color very much.
 
The green on the Sony STR-V5/6/7 series is very pretty. :thmbsp:

That said, I like the blues with hints of red on the old Marantz gear, too.

I don't care for the later BPC-era and newer blue stuff, though. I even have a 100-disk changer that has what looks like blue "neon tube" lighting (not real, but simulated with blue bulbs and glass tubing). Not ugly by any means, but my favorite, either. :no:
 
The green on the Sony STR-V5/6/7 series is very pretty. :thmbsp:

That said, I like the blues with hints of red on the old Marantz gear, too.

I don't care for the later BPC-era and newer blue stuff, though. I even have a 100-disk changer that has what looks like blue "neon tube" lighting (not real, but simulated with blue bulbs and glass tubing). Not ugly by any means, but my favorite, either. :no:

Thanks, but I am talking about 80's on digital. Can anybody answer my original post?
 
I kinda think we did.

Thanks, but I am talking about 80's on digital.
And the first sentence of my post was a response to that. The second was simply an added opinion of my own. Was I out of line?

BTW, I don't consider 80's equipment "modern".

Can anybody answer my original post?
Apparantly not. All we can offer are our humble opinions. The only ones who could possibly provide the definitive answer you demand are the manufacturer's themselves, and I doubt many hang out here.
 
Far better than red! I've has a couple of GM rentals with red displays, I can’t read them at night! I might do better with my reading classes on, but reading glasses/driving = stupidity :drool:
 
Aren't blue LEDs a fairly new invention? It really does seem like all new gear has those glaring blue lights, and I don't find them relaxing at all. Maybe it's just a trend with people following the aesthetics of the ultra high-end audiophile stuff, which seems to have a fetish for frosted acrylic cases, polished gold knobs, and enough blue LEDs to guide airplane landings at night.
 
I'd say it's just because blue LEDs are one of the newer colors. Early on, only high end gear used them because they were relatively expensive in comparison to the common red and green LEDs.
 
blue seems cleaner, you always see sparsely buttoned brushed aluminum cases with blue led's.


if you don't like blue, solder on a green or red one, lol.
 
I think it's a case of blue LEDs being a recent creation - and hence expensive and rare. So a blue LED was supposedly something unusual, until it became a trend.
 
I've seen CD players with a white LCD on them, they look nice as well. A bit more exotic. I can live with the blue though.
 
I think it is because blue displays have the highest readability (the colour appears brightest to us).

Also, as may have said before, blue LEDs for consumer products only came out in the 80s, and being a new technology, must have been pretty rare (and probably more expensive). Manufacturers wanting to distinguish themselves would have put blue LEDs on their gear, and then eventually everyone jumped on the bandwagon.


Nowadays, it seems that utraviolet LEDs are the next big thing, so I suggest that manufacturers begin making gear with ultraviolet displays :D
 
One interesting thing about vacuum florescent displays is that their color is largely dependent on the plastic filter in front of the display. While there are different color phosphors, the most common one appears greenish white on its own, but it can be made to look green, blue, bluish white, or even orange with the right filter. Those orange displays used by Pioneer and Yamaha actually use the same color phosphor as blue and green displays.
 
Don't most newer units use florescent displays, those are naturally blue unless a colored filter is placed in front of them. It's probably easier/cheaper to just leave it as is.
 
I am partially color blind, mostly reds and browns, so it might just me, but...

I find it very hard to read red LED against black background. In bright light, it is almost impossible. I'm even talking those big LED gas price signs. Blue is definitely easier for me, but it can get pretty bright at night. I have a DVD player that has a self dimming LED display, which is pretty neat.
 
Again why on modern stereo quipment. It's easier to see? It's the only thing I don't like about my Denon 777. I highly dislike the blue display.
Any quality units besides Yamaha, and Pioneer that use something other than blue.
I really like the red display, with green mode display colors on the Yamaha CD 2. Very appealing.

? :scratch2:
 
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