Millivolt Meter Nixie Clock

Surprisingly, up until a year ago, [Jimmy] hadn’t seen a Nixie tube. Awful we know, but he has come around to the beauty of glowing numbers in a tube. He recently found an old millivolt meter in a junk pile that used Nixie tubes. The wondrous orange glow beckoned him, so [Jimmy] decided to build a clock.

Just about all of the Nixie clocks we’ve seen (including non-clock builds) rely on building a controller for the Nixie tubes. The controllers range from Nixie Arduino shields to the good ‘ol 74141 IC. [Jimmy] realized he didn’t need to bother with controlling the tubes in an already functional millivolt meter – he only needed to send the right voltage.

For his clock build, [Jimmy] used an Arduino to output a voltage through a bunch of resistor dividers. For example, if the time is 12:30, the output voltage will be 12.30mV. Using this technique, the values for the needed resistors don’t exist, so a little bit of PWM means the Arduino keeps fairly good time.

There’s one added bonus of [Jimmy]’s clock – because the voltage varies around 0.01mV, the finished project acts like a digital version of Lord Vetinari’s clock. It may not be perfect, but at least a nice piece of equipment was saved from the trash.

9 thoughts on “Millivolt Meter Nixie Clock

  1. Interesting way to generate the necessary voltage, PWM on a resistor ladder.
    I would have tried a normal R-2R resistor ladder, without the PWM. You would need 12 output pins, but you could stick with resistors of a single value, and then scale it to a max voltage of 40.95mV. This way you could count in discrete steps of 0.01mV up.

    I’ve seen a similar hack done to digital counters, where simply a pulse is sent to the counter once per second, 41 pulses each full minute and 4041 pulses each full hour. Gives a nice effect as the number runs up and then settles.

    1. I actually thought about that, but I decided I wanted to minimize the pins used to both A) leave room for buttons for control, and B) use fewer pins in general for a smaller microcontroller that I could make a PCB for that just bolts on to the terminals.

Leave a Reply

Please be kind and respectful to help make the comments section excellent. (Comment Policy)

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.