I was not aware of any coating on the tube, and I don't think there's any 
connection to the outside of the tube, though I could be wrong. The Otis 
docs state that the tubes work on capacitive coupling, through the tubes 
envelope. I do not believe any coating on the tube acts as an electrode.

On Tuesday, October 28, 2014 4:18:56 PM UTC-5, Tidak Ada wrote:
>
>  Is it clear to you all that this tube has a transparent Sn-coating as 
> the sensitive electrode?
> Rough handling of the tube surface can destroy it due to disconnection of 
> that coating.
>  
> eric
>
>  ------------------------------
> *From:* [email protected] <javascript:> [mailto:
> [email protected] <javascript:>] *On Behalf Of *Joe Zatarski
> *Sent:* dinsdag 28 oktober 2014 20:46
> *To:* [email protected] <javascript:>
> *Subject:* [neonixie-l] Re: neon otis elevator 'touch tubes'
>
>  Attached is the schematic in PDF form. All lines except one seem to be 
> common between all the tubes. Based on my guess of 135VDC tube supply, I 
> think I was right. Tube drops about 72V when on, leaving 63V to be dropped 
> by the total series resistance, 3600 ohms. 63V/3600ohm = 17.5mA. This is 
> below the maximum rating of 25mA according to the 1C21 datasheet. It then 
> looks like an AC supply to the grid would be required to cause the 
> capacitive coupling that allows the tube to work as a touch trigger. I'm 
> not too sure how to figure out this voltage.
>
> On Friday, October 24, 2014 10:18:34 AM UTC-5, Joe Zatarski wrote: 
>>
>> I will draw up a schematic of what I have in the panel now. I think it'll 
>> probably be similar to what the otis docs show: resistor connected in 
>> series with the tube, trigger and cathode tied together, and connections 
>> for B+ and 'B.O.' (B.O. being the reference line for B+, which also happens 
>> to NOT be at the same potential as ground, due to the AC supply tied to 
>> it). There seems to be a cap, probably in parallel with something, but I'll 
>> take a look.
>>
>> On Wednesday, October 22, 2014 4:51:21 PM UTC-5, Dekatron42 wrote: 
>>>
>>> I think that the best thing you can do is to ask the company who 
>>> replaced it if they can help you with any schematics, otherwise you will 
>>> have to draw one yourself from what you have left of the elevator panel and 
>>> we can take it from there, then you will know what voltages you need and 
>>> you can do some experiments more easily. 
>>>
>>> /Martin
>>>
>>> On Tuesday, 21 October 2014 21:00:47 UTC+2, Joe Zatarski wrote: 
>>>>
>>>> I guess now what I would like to know are some example circuits for 
>>>> power supplies maybe? I guess I need 135VDC, and it needs to be isolated 
>>>> from the mains because it'll also have 150VAC on it relative to earth 
>>>> ground. Easiest to do is get a transformer (if I can find the right 
>>>> voltage 
>>>> output) but how about regulation? Is a properly sized zener diode good 
>>>> enough?
>>>>
>>>> On Monday, October 20, 2014 10:41:47 AM UTC-5, Joe Zatarski wrote: 
>>>>>
>>>>> So I found an elevator control panel in the garbage. They were 
>>>>> replacing a broken one in the dorm next to mine. It appears to have 425A5 
>>>>> 'touch tube' trigger tubes instead of mechanical switches. I saw an old 
>>>>> thread here about them which had a bit of info. I think you need to 
>>>>> connect 
>>>>> a 150vac supply between ground and the cathode, then 135vdc across the 
>>>>> anode and cathode to use them as a touch button. There needs to be some 
>>>>> resistance in series with the tube of course, and the 135vdc needs to be 
>>>>> isolated from the ac. Also, I think the trigger input needs to be tied to 
>>>>> the cathode somehow. 
>>>>>
>>>>> I still have all the wiring in the panel as it was when I found it. 
>>>>> There are 12 floors and a basement, so I'm thinking the buttons can 
>>>>> represent the hour of a clock as well as an am/pm light. Furthermore, for 
>>>>> setting the time, the tubes can still be used as buttons to type in the 
>>>>> time.
>>>>>
>>>>> I'd appreciate if I can get some tips on driving circuitry and 
>>>>> supplies since these are cold cathode neon tubes, something I have never 
>>>>> dealt with before.
>>>>>
>>>>> -- 
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