Nice, but they are way to big for my project as I need something that isn't wider than the Nixie itself so they could be placed very close to each other.
/Martin On Sunday, 27 June 2021 at 20:46:09 UTC+2 Marcin Saj wrote: > If I may... > socket no.3 for LL-55(X) - https://nixietester.com/project/nixie-sockets/ > drivers: https://nixietester.com/project/nixie-socket-driver/ > > Maybe it's something that will help you in your project. > > > On Sunday, June 27, 2021 at 12:57:23 PM UTC+2 Dekatron42 wrote: > >> Yes, driving simple Nixies and saving the number of wires needed is what >> I am looking for (without having to invent the wheel again). >> >> I'd like to drive a bunch of the LL-55(X) Nixies displaying letters and >> also the LC513/A displaying digits in a string of perhaps 50 or so Nixies. >> I'd be using a few small switching PSUs so that I'd only have to run the HV >> line a short distance and also to keep the voltage drop down on the HV wire. >> >> /Martin >> >> On Sunday, 27 June 2021 at 08:26:28 UTC+2 newxito wrote: >> >>> Another reason for a smart socket, is that you could use less wires to >>> drive the nixies. I built a socket for the R|Z568M, so I was able to >>> control the whole clock (6 Nixies, 4 Neons) with only 5 wires (GND, + 5V, + >>> 170V and 2 for I2C) even over a longer distance (about 1.5 meters). After >>> soldering the GND wire to the metal construction, all problems vanished, >>> and the clock is now working flawless. >>> [image: lampclock.jpg] >>> >> -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "neonixie-l" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To view this discussion on the web, visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/neonixie-l/9472eb48-cf61-4acb-b6dd-51b9d0c136f8n%40googlegroups.com.
