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No code, no PCB, just a Shitty Add-On for hackaday #Supercon living in the moment.

18,713 görüntüleme • 1 yıl önce •via X (Twitter)

11 Yorum

Kevin Santo Cappuccio profil fotoğrafı
Kevin Santo Cappuccio1 yıl önce

Now I just need to find a random SAO to pull the connector from. But yeah, this thing is just a ghetto DIY slip ring made of pogo pins, a selector switch from a resistance substitution box, a nixie power supply and a Burroughs 122P244 nixie tube (with bonus Krypton 85 inside).

Kevin Santo Cappuccio profil fotoğrafı
Kevin Santo Cappuccio1 yıl önce

And now it's documented on Hackaday

Kevin Santo Cappuccio profil fotoğrafı
Kevin Santo Cappuccio1 yıl önce

Also when you're done looking at this you should totally check out my more interesting project launching very soon on Crowd Supply

Karl (RIP ) profil fotoğrafı
Karl (RIP )1 yıl önce

@hackaday ... but does it draw less than 1.1 millihorsepower, as required by spec?

Kevin Santo Cappuccio profil fotoğrafı
Kevin Santo Cappuccio1 yıl önce

@hackaday It only draws ~0.32 millihorsepower (130mA @ 3.3V, please check my math) But I'd give all that credit to @omnixie_usa, who make crazy efficient 180V power supplies.

hackaday profil fotoğrafı
hackaday1 yıl önce

Neat! Any exposed HV on those pins or all safe? You wanna be careful!

Kevin Santo Cappuccio profil fotoğrafı
Kevin Santo Cappuccio1 yıl önce

The HV stuff is kinda tucked under the tube and the switching happens on the path to ground (low-side). So it’s “safe” but that really depends on your definition of safe. Like I’m totally comfortable touching it but also would get sued into oblivion selling these on Amazon.

david doll profil fotoğrafı
david doll1 yıl önce

@hackaday 🤔

ऋषिक तिवारी (Rishik Tiwari) profil fotoğrafı
ऋषिक तिवारी (Rishik Tiwari)1 yıl önce

@hackaday looks beautiful

Chuck1e Head profil fotoğrafı
Chuck1e Head1 yıl önce

@hackaday Cool!

Kevin Santo Cappuccio profil fotoğrafı
Kevin Santo Cappuccio1 yıl önce

@hackaday Thanks! My favorite part is that it's like actually done so I don't need to think about it until November. Things with firmware in them never really feel "finished."

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