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General Category => Other retro => Topic started by: Bryce on 15:02, 03 January 15

Title: Nixie Clock
Post by: Bryce on 15:02, 03 January 15
Hi all,
   not even sure if this can be considered "Other Retro" although the Tubes are from the early 70's. This project has been on-and-off for the last 6 months and what kept me from finishing the CPC Laptop over the Christmas break. Turned out to be a good learning experience as I rarely work with such exotic parts (that need 180VDC!!!). Wood also isn't my chosen element (understatement of the year), so that was something new for me too. The tubes are an EMC nightmare, it's a radio clock (ie: receives the time over DCF77 from the Atomic Clock). I had intended installing the receiver inside the same case, but the tubes radiate so much crap, that no receiver works within a 2 metre radius of them! So the receiver is in a seperate unit connected with 2 metres of well screened cable. Anyway, it's finished now, time to get back to CPC stuff :)

Bryce.


Title: Re: Nixie Clock
Post by: Gryzor on 18:49, 03 January 15
So very beautiful. But I guess it means you can only operate it in a single, shielded room? :D
Title: Re: Nixie Clock
Post by: Bryce on 23:23, 03 January 15
Well I certainly won't have it in my Electronics room, it's a disaster. I'd have to turn it off any time I'm repairing something.

Bryce.
Title: Re: Nixie Clock
Post by: CraigsBar on 02:16, 04 January 15
It is beautiful. A friend of mine built a similar clock based around a z80. No ram as his EPROM code used only the z80 gates to store all variables as well as the time. He has time and date support on a 6 character led 7 element led display in a box about the size of a jumbo matchbox. He uses it to this day apin his audio studio. It has been running almost non stop since about 1981. And yes I want it too, as well as Bryce's one seen here.
Title: Re: Nixie Clock
Post by: CanonMan on 12:19, 04 January 15
Quote from: Bryce on 23:23, 03 January 15
Well I certainly won't have it in my Electronics room, it's a disaster. I'd have to turn it off any time I'm repairing something.

Bryce.

Is it noisy just because the nixie tubes have no shielding and they are multiplexed?

I guess you used a PIC to do all the clever stuff?
Title: Re: Nixie Clock
Post by: Bryce on 13:19, 04 January 15
Yes, it's PIC based. The noise is from the DC-DC converter to raise the 12V input to 180V, which is then jumping between athe Anode and Cathode of the tubes - Perfect noise producer. There's no reasonable way to screen that (without completely covering the tubes, which kind of defeats the purpose :D).

Bryce.
Title: Re: Nixie Clock
Post by: Gryzor on 18:46, 06 January 15
But there *are* transparent shielding materials out there, aren't there?
Title: Re: Nixie Clock
Post by: Overflow on 22:26, 06 January 15
Wow! very nice project, I like it!
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