Maker Thomas Shufps has designed a projector clock for nighttime use — and the primary, he claims, to make use of a vacuum fluorescent show (VFD), having already constructed one with an LCD panel.
“The VFD Night time Projector Clock is the primary and solely (for the time being and to my data) evening projecting clock that makes use of a VFD show,” Shufps claims of his creation, which makes use of a coincidence of sizing between the four-digit clock show and a traditional photographic format.
This odd-looking lens mount truly hides a clock, which tasks its digits on the ceiling. (📷: Thomas Shufps)
“When receiving one of many NOS IVL2-7/5 shows, I seen that the illuminated space might slot in about full-format (24x36mm) what was normal in analogue images,” Shufps explains. “For that reason there are many previous lenses (e.g. with M42 threading) on the market that just about value nothing any extra though they’ve spectacular technical properties like 1:2.8 with f=135.”
Predating each LCD and LED shows, VFDs are constructed utilizing phosphor-coated anodes bombarded with electrons from a cathode filament — working like a simplified cathode-ray tube (CRT), although at a decrease voltage. Providing a excessive brightness and coming in a spread of sizes, VFDs had been a staple of electronics till lower-power LEDs and extra detailed LCD panels took over.
To show the classic VFD show right into a clock Shufps constructed a {custom} controller board which incorporates an remoted 24V converter for the anode, a full-bridge rectifier constructed utilizing a two-channel MOSFET driver, and an STMicro STM32 microcontroller to tie all the things collectively — speaking with a Python program working on a desktop to set the time, management the show state, and measure the clock’s accuracy.
The VFD is pushed by a custom-build circuit board and mounted in a 3D-printed housing to place the lens. (📷: Thomas Shufps)
To really mission the picture on the ceiling, Shufps turned to a classic digital camera lens — fitted to a easy cone-shaped 3D-printed adapter to put it on the proper distance from the show. “The brightness is ideal within the evening,” Shufps writes, “however [of course] barely seen at day. If all the things is adjusted correctly, you even can see the [mesh control] grid on the digits.”
The VFD clock is definitely Shufps’ second shot at nighttime time-telling, after an earlier mission which used an LCD panel with a C-mount or E-mount digital camera lens. As with the unique design, Shufps has printed design information and supply code for the mission to GitHub below the permissive MIT license.