I have clocks with both tubes (5092 and 6091). The 6091 should be operated
at higher current (3mA vs 2.2mA), and has a larger diameter than the 5092,
but is otherwise electrically equivalent. I do my own designs, so I dont
know if kits exist.
While the 6091's are bigger, I dont think they are a
I've got a few NIB B-6091 that might go into a clock. Those are the
biggest round top facing I could find anytime recently. Does anyone know a
modern clock kit that takes the B-5092? It might work for the B-6091 I
think. They used the B-6091 for the mission timers on the space program
back in th
Those are are fine displays! I am a Burroughs fan from way back. I have a
6 shooter Nixie from CathodeCorner.com using model B-5092. They are
bright, clear and last a long while.
-martin
On Monday, April 1, 2019 at 7:56:02 PM UTC-7, Art Yorel wrote:
>
> I'm a newbie but have been lurking her
Nice work! With the HV5523 you could drive up to 3 tubes. If there was a
finer-pitch nixie adapter (say a 1.27mm pitch as opposed to the 2.54mm one
you are currently implementing) you could definitely make it a 2 tube
clock.
On Tue, Apr 2, 2019, 11:08 AM Paul Andrews wrote:
> There is a summary
There is a summary on my web site
here: https://www.nixies.us/projects/one-tube-clock/ and more information
than you could ever want on hackaday.io (there is a link from my web site).
It has undergone several (minor) revisions since I documented it on
hackaday.
On Tuesday, April 2, 2019 at 9:5
Any more pics/info on that clock? Looks like a nice little design.
On Tue, Apr 2, 2019, 5:59 AM Paul Andrews wrote:
> This is one of my clicks running a NL8091, which has the same pinout. For
> the 7094 I just change the anode redistor, which is part of the socket.
>
> --
> You received this mes