US 7,525,734 B2
Display apparatus for vehicle
Kunimitsu Aoki, Shizuoka (Japan); Yoshiyuki Furuya, Shizuoka (Japan); Hideaki Kageyama, Shizuoka (Japan); and Go Nakamura, Shizuoka (Japan)
Assigned to Yazaki Corporation, Tokyo (Japan)
Filed on Aug. 01, 2005, as Appl. No. 11/193,383.
Claims priority of application No. 2004-226614 (JP), filed on Aug. 03, 2004.
Prior Publication US 2006/0028733 A1, Feb. 09, 2006
Int. Cl. G02B 27/14 (2006.01); G09G 5/00 (2006.01)
U.S. Cl. 359—631  [345/7] 2 Claims
OG exemplary drawing
 
1. A display apparatus comprising:
a multi-display device for displaying images being visible on both front and rear surfaces thereof, whereby
a first image to be displayed on one display on a first area of the multi-display device is directly projected toward a predetermined eye range, and
a second image to be displayed on another display on a second area of the multi-display device, different from the first area, is at least reflected once before being projected toward the predetermined eye range, wherein
one of the first and the second images is a generated image based on predetermined control signals,
the other is a view image around a vehicle taken by a vehicle on-board camera, said view image being substantially invisible to naked eyes,
the first and second areas are disposed on the same display panel,
the first image displayed on the one display on the first area on the front surface of the multi-display device is the same image as the first image displayed on the one display on the first area on the rear surface of the multi-display device, and
the second image displayed on the another display on the second area on the front surface of the multi-display device is the same image as the second image displayed on the another display of the second area on the rear surface of the multi-display device,
the display apparatus further comprising an optical member disposed in the opposite direction to a direction of projecting the first image for reflecting the second image, last of all, toward the predetermined eye range,
wherein the optical member projects the second image once toward a windshield of a vehicle and the second image is reflected by the windshield, last of all, toward the predetermined eye range.