Build A Nixie Tube Clock
J Aldridge writes: "People are still using Nixie tubes. Their warm glow seems to be the digital equivalent of the warm sound of vacuum amplifiers. One person has constructed a tube wristwatch."
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Although web archive's archives of the Repair FAQ only go back to 15 Feb 2K1, if I remember correctly the removed link went to the page Slashdot is linking too. Word from the wise: I'm not saying Nixies are inheirently dangerous, but many schmatics involving Nixie tubes do not isolate from the power line. And don't forget the big red warning on the page:
What do you think of MusicCity now?
I seem to remember: 190 volts minimum at 3 to 5 milliamps. Discouraging if you want to use batteries.
Liquid Crystal Displays: A few volts at almost zero milliamps. If you had designed with Nixies, the discovery of LCDs was like God was giving us a gift.
Bush's education improvements were
I hit submit rather than preview and neglected to add this:
There is a good background writeup on nixie tubes here on part of the WPS site.
Please don't bother moderating this up - it's at a high enough level that people will see it, and I've been at the cap for quite a while.
(now, if someone were to flip my rtbl flag I'd be thankful...
Microamps versus milliamps (Which, by the way, that switching supply will consume a couple of milliamps as well- not to mention you just bulked up your device considerably...). If it takes 5 micrnoamps to operate something and another unit takes 5 milliamps the microampere consuming device will last much longer.
I don't believe that he was saying that it was impossible or that someone didn't do it- it was just a godsend for the people having to develop devices with numeric displays to not have to mess with Nixies.
I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas