I have what was a nos set of tubes in a spectrum 18, running at 170v. At least two tubes display incomplete digits. I have the PIR sensor installed it may be even less than 1000 hours. Could I be doing something wrong or just a bad batch of tubes? They are all the same date code.
February 18, 2017 at 7:11 PM
Hello all,
I have what was a nos set of tubes in a spectrum 18, running at 170v. At least two tubes display incomplete digits. I have the PIR sensor installed it may be even less than 1000 hours. Could I be doing something wrong or just a bad batch of tubes? They are all the same date code.
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I assembled one of these kits yesterday, the anode resistors are now 8.2K
On the old unit, I can see that they all are 10K 1% - it’s in an acrylic case, so easy to see.
In the afternoon, I’ll check the new unit (metal case, hard to disassemble) and make the measurements.
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Directed to the community at large:
I am in search of a spare set of tubes, is it recommended to buy tubes from 89-93ish? These have a lower failure rate? Short of messaging sellers out of the blue with this request I do not see these listed in that way (by dates).
Just an update on this issue.
Indeed, it was a faulty power supply.
After I changed it in February, after this email, the clock did not show any signs of improvement.
I did change it yet with another power supply somewhere in March, but the issue maintained.
One of the digits started to show some discoloration and then parts of the digits where completely off.
I healed it, but this time I swapped the power supplies from the old and the new clock.
The clock was noticeably brighter and the healed tube had some discoloration, but no dark spots.
Today, 1 day later, the tube is fully healed – no more discoloured spots. On the old clock, the tubes seemed dimmer since then.
I measured the current drawn by each clock. The new one was drawing about 0.7A. The old one 0.5A. They both have a nwts and a PIR sensor.
I replaced the power supply on the old clock with a more powerful one (and of a better brand), and now both clocks are equally bright. The old one draws about 0.68A now.
It’s now clear that I was using a faulty power supply.
Manuel
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Guess that’s too late for me now ☺
I’m sure all is OK now – it really was a broken power supply.
From: <neoni...@googlegroups.com> on behalf of gregebert <greg...@hotmail.com>
Reply-To: "neoni...@googlegroups.com" <neoni...@googlegroups.com>
Date: Monday, 8 May 2017 at 20:29
To: neonixie-l <neoni...@googlegroups.com>
I have had some time to troubleshoot my clock. I found that when running in night mode the tubes are supplied with around 1 mA, and when in day mode are supplied 5 mA. These readings are taken between the annode resistor (10k) and annode. My understanding is the tubes should receive between 4-6 mA. Could the lower night mode current be causing the problems with positioning? I did confirm the tubes are suffering poisioning because I have been able to rejuvenate them by running the offending digits at 10 mA for between 30 min to 3 hours. I'm thinking of running the clock on day mode continuously to see if the tubes begin to heal themselves. Thoughts? Anything else I should be looking at?