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hardware project for a clock around a russian ivl2-5/7 vfd and an esp32-wroom module

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chronovfd

~~ a vacuum-flourescent display clock project ~~

The first prototype of this clock was built completely on protoboard and can be seen on my Twitter.

This has become my first somewhat complex hardware project and as of now I have assembled multiple printed circuit boards for the "display driver" and the "clock core". After fiddling with Espressif's development framework for a while the assembled hardware now actually works as a clock with internet time synchronization. :)

You'll find:

  • some initial research and ressources on the topic in research/
  • hardware files in hardware/
  • the firmware in a PlatformIO project in firmware/

Hardware

As mentioned above the final assembly consists of two sandwiched boards:

The boards were designed with KiCad version 5.1.6.

The bill-of-materials files contain Digi-Key part numbers, so you can easily import all parts into your cart. Only the IVL2-7/5 display itself needs to be sourced elsewhere but there are plenty on eBay.

Both boards can be screwed together e.g. with 11 mm M2.5 standoffs between them. I have found some that are marketed as a "Raspberry Pi assembly kit" that fit well.

Errata

Sometimes things go wrong .. these are known errors and how to fix them:

VFD Driver Board

The VFD driver board is basically a power supply and a simple shift register with a high-voltage capable output side. I used Rolo Kamp's Universal VFD PSU design from this EEVblog forum post. The original schematics and a few pictures are mirrored in research/universal-vfd-psu/.

It can be used standalone but there is no logic on the board, so you'll have to implement time multiplexing for the digits yourself. See the Microchip HV5812 datasheettag.gpgSign for more information. The gist is:

  • supply regulated 5V power on GND / 5V
  • data is transmitted over clock and data with SPI mode 0 transactions at 5 MHz
  • the output pin numbers are listed with their segment or grid function on the silkscreen
  • toggle the strobe pin HIGH to latch the data to the high voltage outputs
  • pulling the filShdn pin HIGH disables the filament supply
  • pulling the hvShdn pin LOW disabled the high-voltage supply
  • when the shutdown pins are left floating / in high-Z state, they are pulled active internally, so the display is "on"
  • PWM dimming the brigthness with the filament shutdown pin is possible

Design files

type file
kicad project hardware/vfddriver.pro
schematic hardware/vfddriver.pdf
bill of materials hardware/vfddriver_bom.csv
interactive bom hardware/vfddriver_ibom.html

Images

Clock Core

The Clock Core board is the control logic for this clock project. If you look at the bill of materials it is a relatively expensive board for what it's supposed to do but I wanted to experiment with some of these components. On this board there are:

  • an Espressif ESP32-WROOM-32 module, which has WiFi and Bluetooth connectivity
  • a USB 2.0 Type-C receptacle for power and data with relatively good input protections and a 3.3V linear regulator
  • an FTDI FT231XS with an auto-reset circuit providing a serial programming and communication interface to the ESP32
  • a Maxim DS1338Z-33+ RTC with a crystal, which is connected to the ESP32 over I²C and has a coin cell battery backup
  • a Maxim DS18B20U temperature sensor with a OneWire interface
  • a footprint for a photodiode to sense ambient light levels
  • a Texas Instruments SN74HCT245PWR‎ level shifter to provide the correct logic levels to the VFD driver board
  • a PWR and a USR LED for that blinkenlights, the PWR LED can be disabled by cutting a solder jumper
  • a 10-pin 1.27mm JTAG header for the ESP32

Design files

type file
kicad project hardware/clockcore.pro
schematic hardware/clockcore.pdf
bill of materials hardware/clockcore_bom.csv
interactive bom hardware/clockcore_ibom.html

Images

Firmware

The firmware is kept in a PlatformIO project. So – if you have platformio already installed – all you need to do is connect the Clock Core via USB and run:

pio run -t upload

Generally, this board is compatible with most ESP32 devkit configurations. I'm using a custom board definition mainly to get faster upload speeds, which the onboard FTDI FT231X can handle. For new projects you may use pio init -b esp32dev.

After flashing the firmware, the board starts in provisioning mode and you'll see the word Prov blink on the display. Use the ESP BLE Provisioning app to connect and provision your WiFi credentials.

Note: I haven't configured a proof-of-posession in the firmware, so you must disable Encrypted Device Communication in the app settings first. If you want to encrypt the provisioning step, look into wireless_provision() in src/wireless.c.

Afterwards, the chip will connect to the internet and attempt to synchronize the time. This will be written to the RTC, which will keep the time as long as an RTC backup battery is present. If upon poweron the last synchronization is more than two hours ago, the clock will be synchronized once immediately. Otherwise it runs on a schedule every night at 05:00. See src/realtimeclock.c if you want to change that. You should probably also fix the timezone if you're not in the "Europe/Berlin" zone. That is set in app_main() with a call to setenv().

LICENSE

Unless otherwise noted in the file (ds1307.*, i2cdev.*) the firmware is licensed under an MIT license, which can be found in LICENSE.

The hardware project is licensed under a CERN Open Hardware Licence Version 2 - Permissive, which can be found in hardware/LICENSE.

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hardware project for a clock around a russian ivl2-5/7 vfd and an esp32-wroom module

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