The KCG089HV1AA-G000 is a 8.9" industrial LCD display panel manufactured by Kyocera, featuring 640×240 resolution with CCFL backlight and Parallel Data interface. With 150 cd/m² brightness and 30:1 contrast ratio, viewing angle 50/50/15/35, designed for industrial instrumentation, embedded systems, and reliable display applications.
| Brand | Kyocera |
| Model | KCG089HV1AA-G000 |
| Size | 8.9" |
| Resolution | 640×240 |
| Brightness | 150 cd/m² |
| Contrast Ratio | 30:1 |
| Viewing Angle | 50/50/15/35 |
| Display Type | Color |
| Backlight | CCFL |
| Interface | Parallel Data |
Industrial instrumentation and gauges
Embedded systems displays
Metering equipment
Point-of-sale terminals
Security alarm panels
Small appliance displays
FAQ:
Q1: What is unique about the 640×240 resolution on an 8.9-inch display?
A1: This combination creates a very unusual aspect ratio. With 640 pixels across but only 240 pixels vertically, the screen appears as a wide, stripe-shaped display. The pixels themselves are rectangular (taller than they are wide) rather than square. This format was specifically designed for industrial applications that need to display long rows of text, wide waveform graphs (like oscilloscopes or seismic monitors), or horizontal machine status bars without taking up the vertical space of a full 4:3 display.
Q2: What does the “AA” in the part number indicate for the video interface?
A2: The “AA” suffix denotes an Analog RGB interface. Unlike the digital TTL panels (which require a parallel data bus), this panel accepts standard analog Red, Green, and Blue video signals along with separate Horizontal Sync (HSYNC) and Vertical Sync (VSYNC). This allows it to be driven directly by older industrial PC graphics cards or PLCs with analog VGA-style outputs.
Q3: What does the “-G000” revision signify?
A3: The “-G000” indicates that this is the original, first-generation release of this specific model, utilizing a CCFL (Cold Cathode Fluorescent Lamp) backlight. It is the baseline version of the panel. Being a “G0xx” series, it requires a separate, external high-voltage inverter to power the CCFL backlight tube.









