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Roy,
I recall as a kid making a "Decision Maker" project that used two neons to indicate Yes and No. My father thought it was pretty cool, especially when I mentioned that I had noticed it came up on Yes more often. I told him I'd fix it but he seemed insistent that I leave it the way it was. I didn't see it much after that, but suspect it played a part in some gambling game in which he held a decided advantage while being able to claim a totally impartial device. ;-) Rob Roy Lewallen wrote: Neon bulbs are curious critters. As you say, they have hysteresis -- a higher strike voltage than sustaining voltage. The company I worked for once used them as low current regulators here and there, as well as for static protection, so they bought or selected them to various specifications for strike and sustaining voltages. Strike voltages varied from 55 minimum to 135 maximum, and sustaining specs went from a minimum of 46 to a maximum of 78. They also exhibited a "dark effect", which I believe was that the strike voltage was dependent on the ambient light level. I recall that a trace radioactive material was added to some -- to reduce the "dark effect", I think, by keeping the gas close to ionization. I imagine the sustaining voltage was controlled by the mixture and pressure of gas. The bulbs were commonly used as pilot lamps, but not when the supply was DC. (This lesson was learned the hard way, judging by company documents and app notes.) Depending on the supply impedance, the pilot bulb could become a relaxation oscillator, interfering with sensitive circuitry. I came in just as their day was ending. Roy Lewallen, W7EL Avery Fineman wrote: Allow me to correct a number. The strike voltage of a typical small neon bulb is high but once struck, and a resistor is in series with it, the bulb potential is around 50 VDC. . . . |
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