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l Root Cause: Catastrophic MOSFET (NCH8200HV) failure observed across all modules.
l Power Delivery Concerns:
The 12V input bypasses critical bulk capacitance prior to distribution.
Current PCB layout lacks immediate electrolytic buffer post power input
l Critical Design Recommendations
12V rail must implement bulk electrolytic capacitor (≥470μF) within 10mm of input connector.

Having to add a 470uF electrolytic somewhat defeats the purpose of such a small power supply. I only used this PSU once for a flat clock base and it's working perfectly so far. I used 4 x 47uF MLCCs in parallel to keep the hole thing flat.
By the way, my attempt to make a similarly flat nixie power supply failed miserably. I tried using the CJ5143-ALC flyback transformer which is 4.6mm high. It worked somehow but I was never happy with my design.
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Agree on not blindly trusting the 12v adaptors.
If you have clocks that use the NCH6300HV or NCH8200HV supplies, the issue is that they WILL die catastrophically if they see inputs over 15v. And they will potentially take out other elements in the neighborhood when they go. Check the 6300 datasheets and 8200 datasheets for the limits.
There are a lot of clocks that use them. Often, the clocks that use them don’t have much (or any) filtering or input protection on the board and just assume that the 12v power supply that is used will have sufficient filtering/protection. That’s the flaw. Not all wall warts or bricks are created equal and they may seem to be working fine, right up until they aren’t. You may get lucky and notice flickering or one day you may see nothing working. The additional components that were suggested are insurance for when the PS fails. And they do fail. Even though a crowbar circuit serves no functional purpose for the operation of the power supply, it is there to protect everything else. This is just a simple response when the clock has no protection on the input and is easy to add. They can be added right at the input jack. Choose a different cap size if this is “too big”.

The 6300HV and 8200HV are great little converters, small, efficient and they power lots of cool nixie and panaplex clocks. Don’t skimp on input protection and don’t count on the fact that the 12v PS is always going to be perfect. If the clock can be designed to run on 5v and uses the 6300HV or 8200HV converters, you are better off using 5v because there is more margin for safety than using 12v. If you need to have level conversions and need 12v, then protect yourself with some filtering and a TVS.
Just my thoughts…
Jeff
From: neoni...@googlegroups.com <neoni...@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of Paul Andrews
Sent: Saturday, February 21, 2026 10:03 AM
To: neonixie-l <neoni...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: [neonixie-l] HV Power Supply failues
I use my own designed converters and it’s real nice knowing how the supply works so you can diagnose issues like this. I’ve used the design in a lot of clocks and never had a problem except in one clock which, after a while, started showing signs of distress - tubes not being full brightness, flickering, noise etc. my converter can be driven with anything from 3V to 24V, but this one was using an apple 5V USB adapter rated at 2.1A. Turned out the adapter was flaking out on me, which was a relief. I didn’t want to discover an issue with my design! Anyway, the moral is: Don’t trust the adapters, but also start the diagnosis with the stuff that is easy to change before you open up the case and get in to the electronics.
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