A holographic fan display is a persistence-of-vision (POV) display. Precisely timed LEDs on a rotating module draw an image in the viewer’s field of vision. In PC applications, the module is integrated behind a protected front or side panel.

What buyers actually see

Bright pixels appear to float against a dark or transparent-looking background. The strongest content uses clear silhouettes, controlled motion, and limited visual clutter. The result is eye-catching, but it is important to describe the technology accurately as a POV display rather than a true volumetric hologram.

What the system includes

A commercial integration typically combines the display module, guarded mechanical structure, power and control electronics, storage or connectivity, content software, and chassis-specific mounting. The user experience also includes startup behavior, upload instructions, and recovery if content cannot load.

Why chassis integration matters

The visual effect is only one part of the product. Clearance, service access, vibration, acoustics, wiring, airflow, and safety protection must be reviewed against the target chassis. A successful sample is evaluated as a complete system—not only as a display on an open bench.

What to ask a supplier

Request controlled model data, dimensioned drawings, electrical requirements, supported content specifications, software lifecycle information, validation scope, quality controls, compliance documentation, warranty terms, and change-management expectations.

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