Yes, the clamping voltage is a little too low - I've tried them. They
do work but a bit too much haze from the other cathodes. You might get
On Feb 17, 1:21 am, Dylan Distasio <
interz...@gmail.com> wrote:
> My bad, sorry I really should have checked the voltage before posting this!
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> On Thu, Feb 16, 2012 at 7:59 PM, Spencer W <
upnxwoo...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> > I think from the datasheet,
> > is 50 volts. Good for vfd's. :) only my guess though
>
> > Sent from my iPhone
>
> > On Feb 16, 2012, at 6:18 PM, William Lee <
interz...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > Hi all-
>
> > I had a question on driving nixies using something other than 74141s.
> > Would any driver that can sink higher currents work ok? Am I right in
> > assuming I can use a driver that sinks with nixies because the cathodes are
> > connected to ground when not floating?
>
> > For example, would this one work to use as a shift register? I realize I
> > won't need one for my current project that already has 74141s wired into
> > the circuit, but was thinking ahead to building a clock from scratch.
>
> > "Add a bunch of high-power outputs to a microcontroller system with
> > chainable shift registers. These chips take a serial input (SPI) of 1 byte
> > (8 bits) and then output those digital bits onto 8 pins. You can chain them
> > together so putting three in a row with the serial output of one plugged
> > into the serial input of another to make 3 x 8 = 24 digital outputs. You
> > can chain pretty much as many as you want. This makes it easy to control a
> > lot of outputs like LEDs from only 3 digital microcontroller pins.
>