I vaguely remember there being a jumper or dip switch on the older passive wall-mount panels to invert the display, although I'm not sure if the active panels had that or not.
While we're on the subject of G3 panels... (CV10s)
I still use lots of them in my personal residence and they still work great! they never go offline (even a wireless one.)
Although it sounds like it doesn't match your circumstances, we've seen this happen spontaneously with CV/CA/CG10. Only after the panel has been offline, unpowered for a while.
The image will be inverted, but the buttons are in the upright (original) positions on the touch surface.
A reload of the panel project seems to correct it when it does it this way... apparently not yours.
We've never seen this happen spontaneously on a panel that stays powered or is off only breifly. We suspect it is aged batteries.
Of course that technote specifically states that the jumper to invert the image is ONLY on wall and rack mount panels, not on table top units like the original poster shows in his picture.
Of course that technote specifically states that the jumper to invert the image is ONLY on wall and rack mount panels, not on table top units like the original poster shows in his picture.
I'm pretty sure the only real difference is the chassis. Though that doesn't mean it will be easy to open up and check.
Comments
--D
I still use lots of them in my personal residence and they still work great! they never go offline (even a wireless one.)
--D
The image will be inverted, but the buttons are in the upright (original) positions on the touch surface.
A reload of the panel project seems to correct it when it does it this way... apparently not yours.
We've never seen this happen spontaneously on a panel that stays powered or is off only breifly. We suspect it is aged batteries.
I'm pretty sure the only real difference is the chassis. Though that doesn't mean it will be easy to open up and check.