On May 21, 12:35 pm, kay486 <
luckyl...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi there, ive been wondering, how precise can you be when you drive those
> tubes? Ive been thinking recently that they would make a really nice clock!
You mean like this one ? :)
http://youtu.be/mQ1567EFCY0
This is with neon-filled IN-9. Grahame has made a similar one with
IN-13 I believe.
>The thing i need to know is
>if its possible with these tubes to have ten precisely given points
It's possible, but I think you'd need to buy a fairly big batch of
tubes, burn off the cathode poisoning that they all suffer from, and
then spend a chunk of time getting a matched set. I went through this
process for a small batch of kits of the seven segment clock, and
rejected a reasonable proportion of tubes, even though the requirement
for precise matching is not that great in my application. IN-13 are
better on all counts (third electrode stabilises the glow position;
more sensitive; less cathode poisoning in my experience), but they are
significantly dimmer than IN-9. You'll need to house the finished
clock somewhere with lowish ambient light.
If you're going to have a crack at this, then take a look at the
TLC5628 octal DAC. Simple microcontroller interface and will drive 8
tubes when used in conjunction with a simple transistor current sink
as Mike outlined in his post. You probably won't need the opamp to
drive the transistor base if you're using this chip with a
microcontroller - I manage around the Vbe drop in software.
Good luck!
Jon.