View Full Version : Lilliput Sunshade Mystery


Rusty Rogers
March 25th, 2011, 08:39 PM
I received my pair of Lilliput 70NP's today and can't for the life of me figure out how the sunshade attaches to the monitor!

There's velcro all around (the sunshade) and pair of straps, but they come folded what appear to be inside-out and no means to really stick it to the monitor.

If worse comes to worse, I'll just cut off the straps, put velcro on the monitor and that will have to do.

Has anyone figured these out?
Good thing they were free.

Josh Bass
March 26th, 2011, 04:55 AM
Ditto. I went to the art supply store, got some regular velcro, cut into thin strips, and attached the way a logical human from our planet would.

Also don't understand how the batteries are supposed to attach. There's a screw on the battery, and slot on the monitor, but nothing to screw into? I got the industrial grade velcro (hard plastic stuff) to solve this problem.

Maybe Lilliput monitors are really a covert form of psychological experimentation. Are we being tested? Did we pass?

Rusty Rogers
March 26th, 2011, 10:00 AM
I take it you got the Sony 970 battery adapter...

That had me stumped for a couple of hours.

The angled bracket is the key...
That slides into the slot in the back of the battery adapter (note the little bearing in the slot) and bolts to the underside of the monitor via the 1/4-20 connection and holds it in the correct centered position. (now say ohhhhh.)

I have two of these monitors and will experiment with both the angled bracket and the Velcro version. Unless I can store it with the arm attached, I have a feeling Velcro will win.

Now add comments from the rest of the million typing monkeys and we'll get it.

Josh Bass
March 26th, 2011, 12:25 PM
I shoulda mentioned, I got the Lilliput 669B, and whatever battery they offer directly from the accessory page on there.

You're saying battery screws into bottom of monitor? Okay, but what if I want to use hotshoe?

Rusty Rogers
March 26th, 2011, 06:26 PM
Here's a look at the back of the battery mount I have.
It mounts to the hole below the monitor.

Ken Diewert
March 26th, 2011, 08:17 PM
Ditto. I went to the art supply store, got some regular velcro, cut into thin strips, and attached the way a logical human from our planet would.

Also don't understand how the batteries are supposed to attach. There's a screw on the battery, and slot on the monitor, but nothing to screw into? I got the industrial grade velcro (hard plastic stuff) to solve this problem.

Maybe Lilliput monitors are really a covert form of psychological experimentation. Are we being tested? Did we pass?

Ditto on both the sunshade and battery. I got some stick on velcro and stuck the battery on the back of the monitor. It works pretty good.

The sunshade is sitting in the box. I tried a few times, but really if I need one in the summer I'll probably use some black cardboard and black tape to stick it on.

Josh Bass
March 28th, 2011, 07:43 PM
Got another question. . .what's the deal with charging the batteries? I have three things with plugs on the end and protuberances on the other end that fit in the protuberance hole on the batteries. All three plug things say "switching adapter", but two are identical and one is different. Only difference is that two say 12v---1500ma the other is 12v----1200ma. I assumed these were both for charging the batteries and for powering the monitor directly via AC if you so choose.

However I left both batteries charging overnight recently and one seemed to die awfully quick the next day. Neither one ever reads as fully charged according to the green lights on the side. . .I get two out of three green lights even after it's been "charging" for a long time. I mean like a 12 hours long time.

Rusty Rogers
March 31st, 2011, 02:15 PM
Here's a quick of some of the features of the Lillyput NP70...
Lillyput 70NP Demo on Vimeo
Thanks to Josh Bass for his calibration settings. They're pretty good!
http://www.dvinfo.net/forum/view-video-display-hardware-software/492892-great-lilliput-calibration-adventure.html