Also (color): Because I'm using different color LEDs I can't use a colored bezel in front of them to improve contrast, so was thinking of going with a smoked bezel, but that might hide the LED positions too much. I believe one could go with a single color for everything and not hurt readability / recognition. A black PWB background for them would probably definitely raise contrast, something I intend to do on the next go-round. Any thoughts on this?
Neutral density might be the best compromise, although since white LEDs are not monochromatic you might experiment and find some filter color that lets a muted red and blue through while allowing the brighter (filter color) pitch display. A black pcb solder mask alone is still going to let the LEDs and the 7-segment background show through.
Another quite easy thing to do is make your panel from clear acrylic or polycarbonate. Mask off areas on the back side that you wish to remain clear, then paint the back side black (or even multi-color with additional masking). When you remove the masking, you will have clear windows over the displays. Now you can cut different color transparent film to glue or tape over the back side of the windows. Voila - a nice shiny panel that is immune to paint scratching. Even the worst sloppy paint job with sags and hairballs will look perfect from the front side through the clear plastic. Some paints are not good for the health of the acrylic though.
You rascal! :-) Very interesting idea! It puts more distance between the tuner and you, thus making it "smaller" but allows you to keep you eye on the pitch antenna. If it weren't for interference I'd probably stick the tuner smack dab in the center of the pitch antenna, and this is one way to do it. So you're going to do a mild parabola to make it appear bigger?
The opposite curvature, as in "TUNER IN MIRROR IS CLOSER THAN IT APPEARS". I was thinking of a wider field of view, not narrower. Of course you could go with the parabola and project a real image of the tuner right in front of your face, but I don't want to have to wear reading glasses to see it.
A parameter test and secondary 7-segment lookup table, ~20 lines of assembly. Mode knob is already there (often the determining factor!).
If your HDL could correct the rightward slant built into the display modules, that would be impressive . Actually a non-italic 7-segment made as part of a custom display panel would be simple to do.