On 2021-04-14 11:47 p.m., gregebert wrote:
> I'm guessing this nixie tube was used in equipment for monitoring
> impurities in a steel plant.
>
(Those are all electronics symbols)
> On Wednesday, April 14, 2021 at 6:46:55 PM UTC-7 严泽远 wrote:
>
> This one marked QS30-75, but I think it's
I'm guessing this nixie tube was used in equipment for monitoring
impurities in a steel plant.
On Wednesday, April 14, 2021 at 6:46:55 PM UTC-7 严泽远 wrote:
> This one marked QS30-75, but I think it's the same one with QS30-7A:
>
> [image: IMG_7739.JPG][image: IMG_7730.JPG][image:
Very interesting
On Wed, Apr 14, 2021, 3:49 PM SWISSNIXIE - Jonathan F.
wrote:
> Hi Folks!
>
> I was contacted by a friendly guy that offered me datasheet scans of the
> chines SZ-2 and SZ-3. When i first heard SZ-3, i was thinking about the
> well known SZ3-1 numerical nixie, but later i was
Looks like he has a 'kick starter' type thing going for it - so there is
some hope that he will turn it into a business
https://camp-fire.jp/projects/view/411096
On Wednesday, April 14, 2021 at 10:25:53 AM UTC-4 Dekatron42 wrote:
>
> Dalibor has posted this on YouTube:
>
An interesting clock - a variant on the illuminated ones...
https://hackaday.io/project/179039-haptic-word-clock
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Dalibor has posted this on YouTube:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ukgsPVB8NI
/Martin
On Wednesday, 14 April 2021 at 15:41:51 UTC+2 Richard Scales wrote:
> ... another excellent video showing exactly how much goes in to making
> Nixie Tubes these days - I'd love to see how it was done 'back
On 2021-04-14 10:02 a.m., Adrian Godwin wrote:
> No, they often have a Z modulation input and many have a TV sync, so
> you'd only need to add a vertical scan. But tube depth is a problem.
> Green isn't, though !
>
> On Wed, Apr 14, 2021 at 2:44 PM jb-electronics
>
No, they often have a Z modulation input and many have a TV sync, so you'd
only need to add a vertical scan. But tube depth is a problem. Green isn't,
though !
On Wed, Apr 14, 2021 at 2:44 PM jb-electronics
wrote:
> It's a good idea, but these scope tubes are too deep and don't have a
>
What a fantastic workshop! Thank you for sharing, Paul, I greatly
enjoyed it!
Jens
On 2021-04-14 8:16 a.m., Paul Andrews wrote:
I’ve been following this guy’s odyssey on twitter for quite a while.
He has made a video showing how he makes Nixie tubes. Hopefully one
day he will make it a
It's a good idea, but these scope tubes are too deep and don't have a
composite input usually (but x/y deflection setup). I am trying to build
a luggable computer (think Osborne I).
Jens
On 2021-04-13 9:05 p.m., Adrian Godwin wrote:
Could you use an old 'scope ? Or would it be too big ?
On
... another excellent video showing exactly how much goes in to making
Nixie Tubes these days - I'd love to see how it was done 'back in the day'
does anyone have a walk-through video of the Mullard/Tesla/Gazotron plant
in full swing?
On Wednesday, 14 April 2021 at 13:16:28 UTC+1 Paul Andrews
I’ve been following this guy’s odyssey on twitter for quite a while. He has
made a video showing how he makes Nixie tubes. Hopefully one day he will
make it a business, but the costs are sky high https://youtu.be/HCT_kgG-Whw
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There's a type of nail file - actually a buffer, I think - which has a
similar very fine abrasive. There are no visible grains of abrasive and the
file appears to be a smooth pink or white (according to the grade)
material. They're sometimes used by model rail enthusiasts to clean the
track
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