|
|
|
|
|
by willis936
1952 days ago
|
|
Nixie tubes driven by a pair of cascaded HV5122 (driver + shift register). The strobe input is what updates the output registers with the recently shifted in contents. The driver takes 500 ns to turn on and the nixie tubes take about 10 us to fire once the voltage is applied. I know it's absurd to worry about the last few ms, but it's part of what interests me about the project. The goal is to make The Wall Time as accurate as I can. I could go further with a delay locked loop fed from measuring nixie tube current. There is room push down to the dozens of nanoseconds of error relative to the PPS source, but I am content with the 10s of microseconds. I can't imagine ever having access to a camera that could capture that amount of error. Thanks for the tip. Hardware timers are best. I'll likely have to take some measurements to calibrate the computation time of getting the system time and performing the subtraction. |
|