Nixie Tube Music Visualizer

 by Senator Penguin
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A hypnotizing music visualizer inspired by those little bars in the top of iTunes. Fourteen Russian IN-13 Nixie bargraph tubes are used as the display.

The length that each nixie tube lights up represents the volume of a certain frequency in the music, 7 different bands for both the left and right channels.



I designed and built this over a month my junior year in high school. This instructable will go over my design process and the construction, hopefully aiding anyone who wants to build one of their own.

Step 1: Design Process

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The goal is to make an interesting display that would show the volume levels of various frequency bands in an audio signal, as in many music players and on the front of some hi-fi audio equipment. There are three major points the project would focus on:

  • Minimizing cost: In the process of designing the visualizer, I found this simple VU meter with a nixie display utilizing an exotic IC to convert an audio signal into a volume level. While convenient, it's manufactured by a small company, and each piece would cost over $5 (for me, nearly $80 in those alone!) For simplicity and for my wallet, this only uses simple, cheap, and mass-produced parts. Also because of cost, I decided that 10K ohm resistors would be used for just about everything, so I could buy a few hundred for around $3.
  • Analog only: Using a digital signal processor was a possibility, but programming a DSP is fairly difficult, and the cost of DACs for the input and ADCs to drive the output began to raise the price too far. So only analog parts such as op-amps and comparators would be used.
  • Adjustability: After Nixie IN-13 tubes were chosen as the display, I realized that the only documentation was in Russian (or poorly translated English) and not very informative. Not knowing anything at all about how much it took to light it up any specific length (aside from less than 4 milliamps), everything about this design would be adjustable.

Step 3: Design: Filter

Each audio channel splits out into 7 different bandpass filters. The filters are centered on 60Hz, 150Hz, 400Hz, 1kHz, 2.5kHz, 6kHz, and 15kHz. Each filter is a Fliege band-pass filter, which has a relatively low count of components, and works well from a single supply (0V and 12V, as opposed to +/-6V). Each Fliege filter uses two op-amps, so another cheap dual op-amp can be used.

The following chart gives the values of the resistors and capacitors for each bandwidth (R4 and R5 are both 10kohms). If you are calculating your own bandwidths, I used a Q value of approximately 5 (none of them are exactly 5 because of the limitations of standard resistor and capacitor values).

Step 4: Design: AC to DC

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Now that there are seven different audio signals for both channels, each containing a different frequency band, they are all converted to a DC volume signal. A 100uF polarized capacitor removes the 6V DC bias on the audio signal. A small signal diode rectifies the signal, discarding all of the negative values. Finally, the signal is smoothed out by a 4.7uF capacitor in parallel with a 10K ohm resistor. A DC voltage of the recent average volume of the signal is the result.

Step 5: Design: Logarithmic to Linear

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This is the stage that would be way easier if I could afford the $80 in THAT Corporation's fancy true-RMS and log-calculating chips. The problem is that what we perceive as volume doesn't directly translate to the voltage of an audio signal. When you double the amplitude of a signal, it doesn't sound twice as loud, it sounds Log(2) times louder. Skipping this stage would make the display spend nearly all of the time at the very bottom, and spiking high when the sound gets particularly loud.
One way of solving this is by generating several reference voltages, one at the quietest level that the display should detect, one at +3dB, one at +6dB, and so on. The volume signal can then be compared to each of these references. For every reference voltage the volume signal is greater than, the display lights an additional unit of length.
An array of seven resistors and two potentiometers is arranged as a voltage divider to generate the necessary eight reference voltages. For each band, eight voltage comparators (in the form of two quad-comparator ICs, I used STMicroelectronics TS3704) compare the signal to these references to determine a linear volume level. The eight outputs of the comparators are then averaged with 10K ohm resistors, giving a range of values from 0V to 12V with each step of 1.5V equaling about 2.1dB.

The values of the resistors in the divider from ground to V+ are:
2k potentiometer, 470, 750, 1.1k, 2k, 2.7k, 4.7k, 7.5k, 25k potentiometer

Step 6: Design: Display

A voltage divider cuts the signal down by 1/2 so it's range is between 0V and 6V. A low-pass RC filter smooths out the very sharp changes in the volume signal (when the level of the nixie tube is changed too quickly, the lit segment jumps out to the middle of the tube, rather than lighting from one end).

The nixie tube has 3 pins, an anode, a control cathode, and an auxiliary cathode. The anode is tied to the output of a high voltage power supply at around 125V. The auxiliary cathode is tied to ground through a 220k ohm resistor. As far as I can tell, the auxiliary cathode acts as a sort of pilot light, forcing the tube to begin to glow at one end first, rather than from the middle or the other end. The control cathode is the main tube, and the current through it determines the length of the tube that is lit. A high voltage NPN transistor modulates the current from the control cathode through a 470 ohm resistor and potentiometer (for tuning purposes). The base-emitter junction of the transistor has a forward bias voltage of about 0.65V that it needs to turn on, so an op-amp is used to adjust the signal for this.

Step 7: Design: Power

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The majority of the visualizer runs off of a 12V DC power supply. The audio in, amplification and filter stages need 6V power (1/2 the supply). The 6V is created by a voltage divider of two 100K ohm resistors. This setup cannot actually source any real amount of current, so it is connected to to non-inverting input of an op-amp (TL3472), with its output connected to its inverting input. The output of the op-amp centers perfectly at 1/2 the supply voltage, and it can source current.

The display stage needs 125V to power the nixie tubes. Creating high voltages with a boost converter requires a very precise layout of the traces, so I purchased a prebuilt one from allspectrum.com

Step 8: Construction: Parts

15x 470 ohm resistor
1x 780 ohm resistor
14x 1k ohm resistor
1x 1.1k ohm resistor
4x 1.6k ohm resistor
1x 2.0k ohm resistor
9x 2.7k ohm resistor
4x 3.9k ohm resistor
1x 4.7k ohm resistor
4x 6.2k ohm resistor
1x 7.5k ohm resistor
2x 8.2k ohm resistor
170x 10k ohm resistor
8x 11k ohm resistor
4x 15k ohm resistor
2x 20k ohm resistor
2x 33k ohm resistor
4x 56k ohm resistor
2x 100k ohm resistor
14x 220k ohm resistor

2x 250k ohm potentiometer
1x 25k ohm potentiometer
15x 2k ohm potentiometer

14x 100uF electrolytic polarized capacitor
14x 4.7uF electrolytic polarized capacitor
18x 1uF capacitor
13x .1uF capacitor
8x .01uF capacitor
4x 1000pF capacitor

23x LM358N dual op-amp
1x TL3472CP dual op-amp (higher output current)
28x TS3704 quad voltage comparator
14x MJE340 NPN transistor
14x 1N4148 signal diode

24x 8-pin DIP socket
28x 14-pin DIP socket
1x stereo 3.5mm audio jack

14x IN-13 Nixie bargraph tube

3x Prototype PCB, 1-hole island, Eurocard size

1x 12V AC/DC adapter

All of the passive components were bought from Digikey, while the ICs and transistors were bought from Mouser, because they were considerably cheaper. Allspectrum.com sold me the prototype PCBs, the AC/DC adapter, and the high voltage power supply designed for nixie tubes. Sergey Bochkov at tubes-store.com sold me the actual nixie tubes. Even though Tubes-Store is run out of Chelyabinsk, an odd industrial city in Central Russia, and it appears that I was only the 5th person to ever buy from the site, they are cheap and shipping was reasonable.

Step 9: Construction: Layout

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The entirety of the construction is done by soldering adjacent pads on the bottoms of the PCBs, using wire on the top if necessary.

Each board has a long trace along the top and bottom. The top is connected to the 12V power supply, while the bottom is connected to ground.

Every bandwidth occupies a vertical strip of PCB, with, from top to bottom, the filter, AC to DC, Log to Lin, and Display circuits. The nixie tubes are then attached to the bottom of the board, where they can be mounted.
Each band takes up about one-fifth of the space on the board, so the left and right boards each have 5 bands, while the middle board has two bands on the left, two on the right, and circuitry common to both the left and the right channel are shared in the middle fifth of the board.
The middle segment has the audio input jack, the amplification for the left and right channels, the 6V power, and the voltage divider for all of the log-to-lin circuits.

Step 10: More Info

If you want to build your own, I hope I included enough information to allow you to make it your own, customizing any part of it, changing the number of tubes, channels, or anything. Here are links to high resolution pictures and the eagle files I used for construction.

Visualizer

Left Board Reverse
Middle Board Reverse
Right Board Reverse

Part Layout
Side View

EagleCAD schematic and board files

If you have any questions, feel free to shoot me an email at admin -at- tchips -dot- com
1-40 of 52Next »
darkstranger94 says: Dec 1, 2012. 1:25 PM
Where can I get the shopping list?
Jakob2803 says: Nov 20, 2012. 12:57 PM
Very nice! Did you use EAGLE for drawing the schematic? :)
Aleator777 says: Sep 18, 2012. 7:34 PM
This is really terrific. I love seeing nixie-based projects!
garage man says: Jul 30, 2012. 1:11 PM
Thank you for the great instructable, very detailed. I was especially excited to see the filter for different frequencies as I have been looking for a good low-cost design to build
agray9 says: Apr 23, 2012. 5:32 AM
Dude if u could hook that up in your car that would be tight!
Sandisk1duo says: Aug 2, 2009. 6:59 PM
great instructable, but a little too complex for my tastes and chance that you're going to sell pre-built circuit boards?
Senator Penguin (author) in reply to Sandisk1duoAug 11, 2009. 3:19 PM
I'm working on a smaller, modular, and cheaper version, which I might sell in a kit form or just make public on batchpcb.com so that anyone can get their own PCBs made.
imjustintime in reply to Senator PenguinApr 12, 2012. 8:41 PM
Please do, I'm sure you could sell quite a few!
dquinnell says: Dec 3, 2011. 9:51 PM
I am very interested in building a project like this, the parts list says 170 (One Hundred and seventy) 10k resistors are used, is that a typo or are there really that many 10k resistors used? If i were to build a one channel visualizer, would i take this parts list and divide it by half (other than the parts where only 1 is used of course)?
djjoec says: Oct 25, 2011. 5:45 AM
I would like to make one of these for my  Melbourne DJ hire company. What would the total cost be?
www.microbike.ie says: Aug 26, 2011. 11:25 AM
basses should be on the left side but you have it reversed on the left EQ is it on purpose?
Senator Penguin (author) in reply to www.microbike.ieAug 26, 2011. 12:14 PM
Yep, symmetry is pretty
imjustintime in reply to Senator PenguinOct 21, 2011. 10:35 AM
Is there any way to add a couple more frequency bands? I have a 10 Band Stereo EQ that this would go nice with in a custom box. Does this use converted AC voltage or just a battery?
Kryptonite says: Sep 26, 2011. 3:33 AM
This is incredible, what was the total cost of this project for you?
ben_xman says: Jul 23, 2011. 8:53 PM
Wow! That's really impressive, especially for someone so close to my age! You should really consider going to MIT or CalTech. So anyhow, what made you want to use nixie tubes?

Oh, and I was wondering a couple things. Could you use, say, five LEDs instead of the tubes and make it small enough to fit in a pair of headphones (I could always add a bit to the sides, bottoms, or even the chord itself)? I was thinking of making a headset mod with a circular visualizer on the side. Any ideas? Thanks in advance! And good luck in the future!
mangomango in reply to ben_xmanAug 31, 2011. 5:48 AM
i would love to have this also! or maybe something with a microphone so you could take it anywhere and have it listen to anything!
Data643 says: Jun 23, 2011. 7:07 AM
Great Instructable, especially for a Freshman. I wish I knew electronics that well.
garywpalmer says: Jun 22, 2011. 8:20 PM
Very nice indeed. When I was an Electronic Technician in the US Navy (early 1970's), one of my favorite pieces of equipment was a frequency analizer with a nixie tube read out. I'm glad to see nixie tubes making a comeback in a lot of projects.
edwardholmes91 says: Jun 22, 2011. 1:55 AM
Very nice! I'm jealous that I never made anything quite that impressive when I was at school in electronics! My final A2 project was a greenhouse climate control system. Never used that dot matrix board but it seems to be a nice compact solution. We had PCB manufacturing facilities at school so I was lucky enough to be able to make my PCBs there. If anyone is interested in the Design, Development and Manufacture of a PCB follow this link to a series of video that I made: http://bit.ly/iNr6Z4
postlife says: Apr 20, 2011. 4:28 AM
Would it be possible to make one with more tubes? I am looking into building a 4' visualizer to mount to the front of my keyboard stand. Thanks.
Senator Penguin (author) in reply to postlifeMay 21, 2011. 3:42 PM
Of course, this is pretty scalable. A while back I was working on making this modular, having each tube attached to the side of a long, narrow PCB, and they could be stacked.
The only things you need to add more is more power, and redesign the filters to cover the audio range better. In other words, you need math.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x0NJhbx9IYM
This guy did something similar, but he went digital with it (FFT) and has some crazy power boards.
applefanatic says: Apr 21, 2011. 11:57 PM
i put it in my xbox hacking lol the audio from my xbox to go on the cover it looks so cool thanks :)
CaseBoy in reply to applefanaticMay 7, 2011. 9:58 AM
ohh post a pic
Max "the bassist" Pratt says: May 3, 2011. 9:06 AM
Ok i am building a bass guitar right now and was thinking 2 of those nixies would be perfect on either side of the 4 strings, so if anybody is interested in some 1 on 1 chatting about how this could be done i would really appreciate it
cybervanig2000 says: Apr 18, 2011. 11:44 PM
First of all, this is a very complex project for a junior in high school to accomplish. so bravo on that. (I barely had my soldering skills and basic circuits at that age) . Really a unique and amazing build. This would look really good with a more modern enclosure and of course with the right music.
onlinemastering says: Mar 11, 2011. 8:20 AM
Nice spectrum analyzer, cheers

online mastering
tigerstickfigure says: Dec 19, 2010. 2:06 PM
Wow, man! This is gorgeous! This instructable got me into both Nixies and Honeycut!
Stormrage says: May 1, 2010. 4:12 PM
Its awesome... just im wondering where can i find those tubes, can it be bit simpler and  can it work with microphone?
luhe98922 says: Feb 11, 2010. 6:19 AM
Hi there! Could I use a more common LM339 voltage comparator instead of the ts3704 which is giving me a hard time to find?
Senator Penguin (author) in reply to luhe98922Mar 24, 2010. 4:17 PM
You would need to adjust the section in between the comparators and the display op amp.  The TS3704 has push-pull outputs, which considerably simplifies things.  The LM339 has pullup resistors on the outputs, which makes it impossible to just attach all of the outputs with resistors to average them.
bman22 says: Dec 11, 2009. 12:21 AM

I have been looking for exactly this for a different project i am working, my only problem is that i need a variable voltage between 0 and 5 volts instead of your 12v current system. Can anybody here help me in acheiving this. Its a bit over my head, so i would really appreciate some help.

satanklawz says: Nov 1, 2009. 4:37 PM
Great project! I've ordered most of the same parts. What are the voltage requirements for the capacitors? You wouldn't happen to still have the parts list from mouser and digikey?
satanklawz in reply to satanklawzNov 1, 2009. 5:53 PM
Based on a comment you made before, is the information below correct?

14x    100uF electrolytic polarized capacitor 25v
14x    4.7uF electrolytic polarized capacitor 25v
18x    1uF capacitor 25v
Are the below capacitors multilayer ceramic, or mica? Would ceramic suffice (I didn't see polarity noted for any of them)?

13x    .1uF capacitor (should this be 14?)
8x    .01uF capacitor
4x    1000pF capacitor
alfredhenriksen says: Oct 24, 2009. 2:41 PM
I love it!

Thank you for writing and shareing this project. :)


fade400 says: Oct 5, 2009. 10:53 AM
Does the value of Cin matter ?
Senator Penguin (author) in reply to fade400Oct 5, 2009. 1:49 PM
The image annotations are a bit buggy, it should indicate that Cin isn't needed in this design, I didn't include it in the final schematic or board.
Smithjoe1 says: Sep 15, 2009. 7:11 PM
You can probably use half the parts if you use LM3196 chips for the log to linear, they are identical to the circuit that is printed on the original post but cut it from 4 chips to 1 on each tube. I've got a set of IN9 tubes that I'll be building this with. But I'm having a hard time understanding the frequency splitters, how do you work out what resistors to use for each frequency?
lindland1 says: Aug 28, 2009. 9:19 PM
can i use 9 in tubes in sted of 14in X 13in
szechuan53 says: Aug 27, 2009. 12:41 PM
Aw man, this is soooo cool. Did you do this as a school proj or just for fun?
lemonie says: Jul 26, 2009. 3:04 PM
Really good looking - any plans to mount these in a case? L
1-40 of 52Next »
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