Hi,

Much of the work is in cutting and machining the parts, if there is
enough interest I'd supply it as a kit though.

Tony.

On Jun 21, 8:22 pm, Dekatron42 <martin.forsb...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Absolutely fantastic!
>
> This might actually get me to play chess again!
>
> Will you publish schematic drawing of this so it could be built?
>
> /Martin
>
> On Jun 21, 9:11 pm, Tony Adams <sa...@amt-electronics.com> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > Thank you :)
>
> > They're driven inductively using an array of 64 tuned primaries and a
> > secondary coil in the base of each piece which directly feeds a C-W
> > multplier to produce around 180v.
>
> > Tony.
>
> > On Jun 21, 7:35 pm, jb-electronics <webmas...@jb-electronics.de>
> > wrote:
>
> > > Seriously: The coolest thing I have ever seen with Nixie tubes. How do
> > > you drive the tubes?
>
> > > Jens
>
> > > > Hi all,
>
> > > > Hope you won't mind me spamming this here but I've finally completed
> > > > something nixie-based.
>
> > > > I have a bad habit of building prototypes only to add to an ever-
> > > > growing list of 'features' which inevitably result in a completely new
> > > > design and software rewrite - so I decided to build something that
> > > > couldn't suffer from feature creep and wouldn't 'benefit' from
> > > > humidity sensors, GPS, USB, IR or RF remote or movement activation.
>
> > > > Some pictures and a (not very good) video of it in operation can be
> > > > found here:
>
> > > >http://www.lasermad.com/?p=235
>
> > > > Hmmm... a PIR sensor might just... I could easily add that to the
> > > > controller... and a touch switch to deactivate.. or maybe a Zigbee....
>
> > > > Tony.

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