Ohh, I would go for just one watch if I had the parts, mass production has never been my focus as I just do these thingd for fun and because I can.
I guess that the Burroughs Self Scan design is the smallest "dekatron"- like object there is, I have not seen anything similar from any other manufacturer. It would however need some re-design to work as a true dekatron with output cathodes if you'd like to drive a Nixie from it, otherwise a combined design with a Dekatron and the ZM1050 (Z550M) "pixie" would have been nice too. The smallest dekatrons, to my knowledge, with output cathodes which could drive a Nixie via a transistor is probably the ZM1170 / Z504S types which come in a 13 pin B13B socket, the same socket that ZM1040 Nixies use. The smallest ones, to my knowledge, which you can use to drive a Nixie with directly are the GSA10G / GCA10G (similar designs are Z572S / Z573C). I'm making a clock with the GSA10G's but it is really slow progress as my family and work takes most of my time. /Martin On 12 Maj, 00:18, Cobra007 <[email protected]> wrote: > Thanks Martin, > > It is of course technically possible to use dekatrons, but are there > any that are small enough for use as a wrist watch? Also, to make it > worth the effort, you need quite a stash of those tubes, I mean it > doesn't really make sense to spend all this time designing it and then > only have enough tubes for 10 watches :-). > > Another possible problem could be the brightness of the tube cathodes. > The dekatron only lights up only a small dot rather than a whole > digit. > I like the idea though! > > Michel > > On May 12, 7:45 am, Dekatron42 <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > > Nice! > > > I wish there where small enough Nixies to make a four digit watch the > > same (or smaller) size! If it would have been possible to make the > > counting logic with small dekatrons I would have paid anything to get > > one! > > > /Martin > > > On 11 Maj, 13:38, Cobra007 <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > Thanks Dave, > > > > It's a bit of a struggle doing my own work and the nixie watch in my > > > spare time. I would really like to see it in it's case, but I know for > > > a fact I'll be very busy next week. Still, I'll give it my best shot. > > > > Michel > > > > On May 11, 8:53 pm, Lucky <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > > Great Michel, looking fine I must say congrats on your hard work. Will > > > > be > > > > interesting to see the case/strap you design for it. > > > > > On Thursday, 10 May 2012 08:27:58 UTC+1, Cobra007 wrote: > > > > > > Programming is almost done! > > > > > There are 9 settings that the user can change according to his/her > > > > > preference. This is related to tube brightness, time format, rotation > > > > > speed, power saving modes and sensor sensitivity. Additionally, there > > > > > are 2 settings for calibration of the RTCC to fine tune it down to > > > > > about 2.5sec per month. It also incorporates a 16 bit counter that > > > > > increments at every time trigger. Battery should last for more than > > > > > 20,000 triggers under normal circumstances. > > > > > >http://youtu.be/n7NGRoVZfIY > > > > > > Michel -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "neonixie-l" group. To post to this group, send an email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/neonixie-l?hl=en-GB.
