Hello Yan, sounds great! Richard also suggested I bought from him but maybe 
I can avoid depleting his stock.
I will write you an e-mail directly.

Thanks!

On Tuesday, 29 June 2021 at 13:34:57 UTC+1 严泽远 wrote:

> Hi Martin, I'm Yan Zeyuan, a Nixie Clock enthusiast and the designer of 
> NCH8200HV <https://www.nixieclock.org/?p=1454>. nixieclock.org is my 
> website based in China, omnixie.com belongs to my authorized reseller and 
> business partner in US, you can purchase it directly from me and save some 
> shipping costs.
>
> Thanks.
> Yan.
>
> 在2021年6月29日星期二 UTC+8 下午3:19:56<[email protected]> 写道:
>
>> I'm in the UK. I see omnixie is selling "on offer" for $19 but then when 
>> it comes to shipping and taxes it adds the ~$40.
>> nixietubes.org guy, Yan Zeyuan, is linking to taobao for purchasing a 
>> genuine product where it sells for $12.
>> Can't buy from taobao so trying aliexpress and buying from someone who 
>> claims a genuine product.
>> We will see when it lands.. Could still be a copy. Price was £13.  
>>
>> On Tuesday, 29 June 2021 at 03:47:07 UTC+1 Richard Scales wrote:
>>
>>> Where are you located ? I usually purchase NCH8200 for < £20 plus 
>>> shipping and that comes to way less than $60.
>>> Another option is available here as a kit: 
>>> https://threeneurons.wordpress.com/nixie-power-supply/hv-supply-kit/ 
>>> The site also publishes full details of the circuit which I have used many 
>>> times with success on my own boards. It's a well established design using a 
>>> part which is relatively ancient but has proven reliable. 
>>> As Paul mentioned, layout of these things is often critical so always 
>>> look at the manufacturers recommendations for the layout of components, 
>>> tracks and copper fills as it can make the difference between a functional 
>>> power supply and something that gets too hot and releases the magic smoke 
>>> from time to time (speaking from my own experience).
>>> - Richard
>>>
>>>
>>> On Monday, 28 June 2021 at 23:53:47 UTC+1 Jon wrote:
>>>
>>>> Another upvote for the TaylorEdge ones - I've used them in a variety of 
>>>> designs over many years and they're great. Decent direct support from the 
>>>> designer too. I am happy to design my own switchers but I only bother now 
>>>> for dekatron circuits or other  oddball things. For regular nixie needs, 
>>>> it's very difficult to match the price/performance/board economy of John's 
>>>> work, so I've come to the conclusion that my time is better deployed 
>>>> elsewhere :)
>>>>
>>>> Jon.
>>>>
>>>> On Monday, June 28, 2021 at 10:38:11 PM UTC+1 [email protected] 
>>>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Oh those also look very nice and price is decent! Although shipping is 
>>>>> also $14
>>>>> This will be my go-to if I can't find a seller I am willing to trust 
>>>>> on those NCH8200HV ones.
>>>>>
>>>>> On Monday, 28 June 2021 at 22:26:31 UTC+1 jrehwin wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> Yea simple question, I want to make a nixie clock with 4x IN-12's and 
>>>>>> I want to keep the circuit simple. 
>>>>>> Something akin to this: 
>>>>>> Youtube.com 
>>>>>> <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ObgmVNV1Kfg&ab_channel=GreatScott%21>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Not sure if I should provide 12v to my circuit and use a linear 
>>>>>> regulator to step down for logic to 5v like in the video, or if I can 
>>>>>> just 
>>>>>> provide 5v directly and pick a boost converter based on that.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I like the TaylorEdge ones, they're compact, and a solid, 
>>>>>> professional design.  Available in vertical and horizontal mounting to 
>>>>>> accommodate varying packaging requirements.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> - John
>>>>>>
>>>>>>

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