I contacted Pete, he has the boards available... send him an email if
interested.

Cheers,

Nick

On Wed, Sep 18, 2024 at 1:33 PM Chachi88 <[email protected]> wrote:

> First off, thank you guys very much for your input here, I will address
> them most recent to oldest.
>
> Peter,
> I apologize I cannot view this link I do not use facebook.  I also cannot
> find a link to Richard Scales B-8091 clock PCB that you mention.
>
> Nicholas Stock,
> Thanks a lot for showing me this website, I had come across it also, but
> was discouraged by the "sold out" notification for this board.  Is there
> any way I can message the seller, you think?  I really like all the
> features this board has already implemented for me...but maybe greg's first
> comment is calling my name...
>
> gregebert,
> Thanks for the very informative points, I have addressed my responses and
> followup questions individually below in *Italics.*
>
> #1. I dont like sockets because they put stress on the tube pins. Some of
> them grip the pins very hard and it's difficult to insert or remove the
> tubes, which adds to the risk of bending or breaking the pins or putting
> stress on the glass. Instead, I use socket pins soldered into the PCB, and
> the force to insert/remove tubes is very low.
> *Point taken, I will look at my sockets carefully before considering using
> them.  Otherwise I will probably borrow your idea, cheers.*
>
> #2. Direct drive. There's no need to multiplex individual tubes, and
> there's no cost benefit when tubes are worth hundreds of dollars apiece and
> the drive electronics is at most a few dollars. Multiplexing requires
> higher current, and that degrades the tube's lifetime.
> *This is what I have understood as well, thanks for confirming.*
>
> #3. Use a current regulator, and set the current at the recommended spec
> value; too high and you wear-out the tube. Too low and you risk cathode
> poisoning. A single anode resistor per-tube is OK, but as the anode voltage
> varies, so does the current (no such problem with a current regulator,
> though). You can mitigate this by using a higher anode supply voltage and
> larger anode resistor, at the expense of more wasted energy. As tubes age,
> their striking voltage may increase, so having a higher anode voltage will
> help mitigate this.
> *Understood, is this implemented a current regulator per tube or is this a
> single current regulator?  If single current regulator, how do you account
> for possibly having varying current with different digit activation? or am
> I missing an operating principle here?*
>
> #4. PIR sensor. Turn off the tubes if nobody is there to watch them.
> *This will definitely be part of the overall clock design (also
> incorporating a Noritake Itron 20 character 5x7 VFD).  I plan on having a
> smoked plexiglass case housing the electronics and VFD while mounting the
> nixie tubes on top. Which leads on to our next point...*
>
> #5. Protect the tubes inside a case, and make sure there is enough
> ventilation so the heat doesn't build-up inside. On my later designs I have
> a thermal sensor (sometimes several) so that software can monitor critical
> temperatures and shutdown if things get too warm.
> *If the tubes are always going to be high up in the air (on a dedicated
> wall shelf), is casing them necessary? Could not casing them cause
> convection heat to rise around them and risk stressing the glass?  The
> thermal sensor is a good idea, for the inside of my case I will certainly
> implement this, probably in multiple spots as you suggested.  Do people
> ever put thermocouples on the tubes themselves to monitor heat or could you
> see value in it?  I might consider that in my design.*
>
> #6. Depoisoning routine to exercise all cathodes.
> *This is not the first time I have read of depoisoning (a common feature
> on most bonafide driver boards I have seen). I have also seen there are
> different marketed techniques for depoisoning: slot machine, strobe, etc...*
> *What are the principles behind cathode poisoning and the theory of
> prevention? If this has already been documented somewhere please give me
> strength on my journey you send me on.*
>
> #7. Backlighting (or base lighting). I havn't done this on any of my
> clocks, and I've never had problems with tubes not firing-up. Others have
> reported problems without backlighting. It can have aesthetic value, though
> I'm not fond of it.
> *I tend to agree with you, for me, this was considered aesthetically not
> necessary, but if there is value in ensuring operation, I will plan on
> incorporating this in the design even if it is left partially implemented
> in hardware or neglected in software...*
>
> That should cover the necessities for the tubes; there are always lots of
> other features that can be done, especially if the clock has open-source
> software (or you develop it on your own).
>
> *Thank you again sincerely for expounding this much on this, I in the end,
> I am hoping to find a clock/driver board with open source software or just
> raw signal input pins exposed that way I can incorporate it in with my VFD
> with minimal additional effort expounded on the nixie driver block (because
> it has already been done probably way better than I would do it on a first
> pass).  I can then address it, animate it, etc. with a microcontroller of
> my own...*
>
>
> On Wednesday, September 18, 2024 at 11:05:11 AM UTC-4 Nicholas Stock wrote:
>
>> Pete also has a remote driver system that will work with B8091s...
>>
>> https://www.pvelectronics.co.uk/index.php?main_page=index&cPath=43
>>
>> Nick
>>
>> Sent from my iPhone
>>
>> On Sep 18, 2024, at 07:16, Peter Doroba <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> 
>>
>> This is the clock I made using Richard Scales B-8091 clock PCB.
>>
>> https://www.facebook.com/groups/142414439207058/search/?q=b-8091
>>
>> On Wednesday, September 18, 2024 at 12:41:14 AM UTC-4 gregebert wrote:
>>
>>> Those are very valuable tubes, so if you are willing to design your own
>>> driver and the PC board, I would do that. I've made several clocks and
>>> never had a design problem that affected the tubes. Even if you find a
>>> board to purchase, see if any of the following apply:
>>>
>>> Some of my suggestions:
>>> #1. I dont like sockets because they put stress on the tube pins. Some
>>> of them grip the pins very hard and it's difficult to insert or remove the
>>> tubes, which adds to the risk of bending or breaking the pins or putting
>>> stress on the glass. Instead, I use socket pins soldered into the PCB, and
>>> the force to insert/remove tubes is very low.
>>>
>>> #2. Direct drive. There's no need to multiplex individual tubes, and
>>> there's no cost benefit when tubes are worth hundreds of dollars apiece and
>>> the drive electronics is at most a few dollars. Multiplexing requires
>>> higher current, and that degrades the tube's lifetime.
>>>
>>> #3. Use a current regulator, and set the current at the recommended spec
>>> value; too high and you wear-out the tube. Too low and you risk cathode
>>> poisoning. A single anode resistor per-tube is OK, but as the anode voltage
>>> varies, so does the current (no such problem with a current regulator,
>>> though). You can mitigate this by using a higher anode supply voltage and
>>> larger anode resistor, at the expense of more wasted energy. As tubes age,
>>> their striking voltage may increase, so having a higher anode voltage will
>>> help mitigate this.
>>>
>>> #4. PIR sensor. Turn off the tubes if nobody is there to watch them.
>>>
>>> #5. Protect the tubes inside a case, and make sure there is enough
>>> ventilation so the heat doesn't build-up inside. On my later designs I have
>>> a thermal sensor (sometimes several) so that software can monitor critical
>>> temperatures and shutdown if things get too warm.
>>>
>>> #6. Depoisoning routine to exercise all cathodes.
>>>
>>> #7. Backlighting (or base lighting). I havn't done this on any of my
>>> clocks, and I've never had problems with tubes not firing-up. Others have
>>> reported problems without backlighting. It can have aesthetic value, though
>>> I'm not fond of it.
>>>
>>> That should cover the necessities for the tubes; there are always lots
>>> of other features that can be done, especially if the clock has open-source
>>> software (or you develop it on your own).
>>>
>>> On Tuesday, September 17, 2024 at 8:17:28 PM UTC-7 Chachi88 wrote:
>>>
>>>> I am climbing stairs from the foot of the mountain to sit at the feet
>>>> of all you nixie gurus.
>>>>
>>>> What is the current state of the art for remote driver boards?  I am
>>>> aware some of the older drivers are not as reliable or can cause the tubes
>>>> to degrade quicker.  Some of the new options I am seeing have "cathode
>>>> poisoning prevention"  I have recently come upon qty 6 of the NL8091's and
>>>> their original sockets and socket mounting plate, which I wish to reuse for
>>>> a clock. Are there any off the shelf boards even capable of driving this
>>>> tube?  I was looking at a board on ebay that comes with an IR remote but it
>>>> seems too good to be true, I would be willing to spend 5 times as much for
>>>> a board that was properly documented and put together and had some sort of
>>>> pedigree...
>>>>
>>>> Thanks in advance for any advice or direction you can give.
>>>>
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