Home » How One Man Created The Coolest Speedometer Of All Time Using Forgotten 1950s Technology

How One Man Created The Coolest Speedometer Of All Time Using Forgotten 1950s Technology

Nixie Dashboard Ts
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There have been countless speedometers made throughout automotive history, and some have been worthy of being put into an art museum. Recently, I saw a speedometer that I adore more than any other, part of an entire classic-car instrument cluster that displays all its information through an array of Nixie tubes. I think it’s the coolest thing ever. It’s perhaps even cooler than the other Nixie tube-based objects this man has invented, which includes the watch that I’m wearing right now.

Earlier this month, I took part in the Lone Star/No-Start Lemons Rally. It was at this rally that I met an associate of Jason Torchinsky’s named David Forbes. At first, I was drawn to David by his teal Volvo PV544, a car that he told me had been in his family for several decades.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

David was joined by his identical brother, who was driving a similar PV544 that was acquired only a couple of months before the Lemons Rally and hastily painted teal. Together, the twins had a clever theme, calling themselves Thing One and Thing Two from the Dr. Seuss universe.

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Mercedes Streeter

At first, my fascination was just with the brothers’ cars. The Lemons Rally welcomes all road-legal vehicles, and this rally had everything from a Corvette C1 with mismatched panels, a fiery carburetor, and shag covering the entire interior, to a Honda Odyssey with the front clip of a Pontiac Aztek and with every inch of its body painted to resemble a boombox. The PV544s stood out to me for their beauty and their lovely color. David even told me that his Volvo was so original that it was still rocking an original radiator more than 50 years after it was damaged in a crash. Sure enough, the radiator is still dented and cut up from its impact with the engine fan.

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Mercedes Streeter

But it was what I found later in the rally that blew my mind the most. We came across the pair of Volvos parked behind a stricken Fiat. Griffin and I pulled over to offer any help that we could. It was during that stop that I saw that David’s speedometer had what looked like cardboard covering it. I walked over, wondering what the deal was. Then, my mind was blown. The cardboard was acting as a visor for a custom instrument cluster made entirely out of Nixie tubes!

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Crosscab Road Trip Griffin Riley Ilce 1 12 05 25 64
On the left: Oil pressure and coolant temp. In the Middle: RPM and speed. On the right: Voltage and mileage. Credit: Griffin Riley

What made my brain melt even further was the completeness of the instrument cluster. It would have been amazing enough for David to have just built a Nixie speedometer, but he went all the way and made his tubes display every vital number. His Nixie instrument cluster displays engine RPM, vehicle speed, battery voltage, total mileage, coolant temperature, and oil pressure.

If you take a look deeper at the photos here, you’ll notice that David used different kinds of Nixies for the display, and they’re all attached to a custom circuit board. The Nixie tubes and their board interface with a computer module, which takes the mechanical inputs from the associated instruments and transmits them in a way that the tubes can display.

Crosscab Road Trip Griffin Riley Ilce 1 12 05 25 41 2
Griffin Riley

I couldn’t help but imagine a sort of alternate past here, one where vintage cars had Nixies for instrumentation. David told me that my fantasy isn’t far off from the reality that he created, since his car and the Nixie tubes existed in the same era.

My big question was how someone like David came up with the idea for a Nixie speedometer, and how he even knew how to make it all work.

Nixiefun
Griffin Riley

A Beloved Old Technology

Admittedly, I’m obsessed with Nixie tubes. I have a Nixie tube watch, and for years, I’ve been dreaming of a Nixie tube speedometer that could plug into a modern car through OBD-II. Sure, it would be redundant, but it would still be fun! That’s when David showed me his wrist. He, too, had a Nixie watch. But there was a twist, as he told me that he is the inventor of the Nixie watch.

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If my brain was already blown by his speedometer, it struggled to comprehend what I heard. Again, I adore and cherish my Nixie watch; I’d rather rock it than any Rolex. And here I am meeting the guy who came up with the idea!

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Mercedes Streeter

If you’ve gotten this far and have no idea what I’m talking about when I mention Nixie tubes, I’ll explain. The invention of the Nixie tube as we know it is credited to a creation by engineer David Hagelbarger in 1955. From the Computer Museum:

Patent drawing for Prototype Nixie Tube, A T & T Bell Laboratortes. The prototype Nixie Tube and the patent material were presented to the Museum by Its Inventor, David Hagelbarger, this is a glow discharge tube for displaying numbers.

Patentimagenixie
USPTO via the Computer Museum.

The tube contains an anode and ten cathodes shaped like the figures 0 to 9 inclusive. The tube is filled with gas and a glow discharge initiated between the anode and cathode that is to be lighted. The glow occurs as a sheath which covers the cathode. A glowing figure at the back of a group of cathodes is not obscured by the unlighted ones in front of it.

The tube was conceived as an output for a computer. It permits any one of ten well-formed figures to appear in one place. Nixie tubes were used in some early computers and calculators, Including the Anita, the first electronic calculator that is on display in the artifact Timeline on the fifth floor of the Museum.

Nixie2
Hellbus – CC BY-SA 3.0

David Hagelbarger was not the first to take a swing at a display like this. Patent records show that several inventors created glowing displays. One was Hans P. Boswau, who created such a display back in 1934. However, the Nixies that much of the world knows today are derivatives of the David Hagelbarger creation.

Early Nixies were made by Haydu Brothers Laboratories, a vacuum tube manufacturer that was purchased by the Burroughs Corporation. The Nixie tube was known as the “NIX I,” an abbreviation for “Numeric Indicator eXperimental No. 1.” The Burroughs Corporation would trademark its tubes under the Nixie name. Nowadays, “Nixie tube” is a generic term for any readout tube of the Nixie design, even if it wasn’t made by Burroughs. It’s sort of like how everyone calls all facial tissues Kleenex, even if they aren’t Kleenex-brand tissues.

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Burroughs Corporation

Nixies used to be everywhere, from telephone switchboards and elevators to stock tickers and airport signs. Of course, they were in computers and calculators, too. Nixie displays enjoyed strong popularity for a couple of decades into the 1970s before technologies like the vacuum fluorescent display and the light-emitting diode replaced the Nixie.

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If you came into Nixie tubes late, as I did, you might have been under the impression that Nixies were a Soviet invention and design, when they were actually popularized by American companies. This misconception could be because the former Soviet Union produced piles upon piles of Nixie-style tubes well into the 1980s at least. The Soviet Union made so many tubes that there are countless examples still sitting brand-new and unused, many decades later. If you buy a Nixie watch or Nixie clock today, chances are it’s going to have one of those old tubes. Genuine Nixie tubes aren’t made in significant numbers anymore. There are some shops that make small numbers of new ones, but they tend to go into the shops’ own devices. As Nixies become scarcer, they’re getting more expensive.

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Mercedes Streeter

The Nixie Man

This brings us back to David Forbes. If you check the Internet today, you can find countless small shops and creators who will build you a Nixie tube watch. I have a gold Nixie watch (above) that a guy in Ukraine made me. Weirdly, I never really asked myself who invented the Nixie watch. I sort of just assumed they were probably always a thing.

This assumption was wrong. When David talked about his speedometer, he mentioned Steve Wozniak’s iconic Nixie watch. If you look at imagery from the early 2000s, Steve can be seen rocking a unique Nixie tube watch. I remember seeing these images when I was shopping for my own Nixie watch. David told me he was the one who invented and built Steve’s watch. Check this video out:

David is a self-taught electrical engineer whose dad was an astronomer who tinkered with electronics. David says his dad’s work on electronics likely rubbed off on him, and David started messing around with electronics at the early age of five. He worked on military computers and radio telescopes in his career, but, at least to me, it’s the work David does in his lab that’s the most impressive.

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In a video with the Exploratorium Maker Faire in 2012, David talked about a time when his dad worked with graduate students at a university, and one student had a late 1950s-era Accutron Spaceview watch. What was unique about it was that, unlike every other watch, this one worked through a tuning fork. The watch hummed rather than ticked due to the nature of the tuning fork. This planted an idea in David’s head that watches didn’t have to be so normal. Here’s the video:

Later, David met a man involved with the FidoNet bulletin board system computer network. It was then that he discovered the Nixie clock. It was delightful, but also hilariously impractical, as the Nixies in that clock needed around 200 volts to illuminate. By David’s own admission, there are perhaps a million better and more practical ways to tell time. But the Nixies were interesting and looked awesome. This is also when David was introduced to the idea of using an oscilloscope to tell time.

David’s world changed in 2001 when his son got cancer. He stopped making computers for the military and decided to make fun clocks instead. David made awesome Nixie and oscilloscope clocks, and his son got better, too. He learned that he’d rather use his skills to build objects that made people happy, rather than objects designed to cause harm.

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David Forbes

David would later meet Jeff Thomas, a man who took a Nixie clock and strapped it to his wrist. This looked awesome to David, but the watch was massive. David continues with how he turned this idea into a true wearable watch:

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I got out my defunct Fluke 8100B nixie DVM and took out the B5870 tubes. (Don’t worry, I put them back in!) They seemed just right for making into a very small clock. I found that I could fit two tubes and a camera battery in a pretty small space, about 1-1/2 inches square. Four tubes would make a pocket watch sized clock. A microcontroller like the 68HC705J1A that I used for my scope clock looked like a good fit. I discussed this in email with Jeff, and he thought it was a fine idea. He provided some information about what his customers wanted to see in a nixie watch, and I referred to that list when doing my design. I seem to have gotten everything except the year-long battery lifetime accomplished, although it took me a few years to squeeze it all in there.

In March I made a prototype PC board nixie clock with four tubes, a little LT1308A switching power supply, the HC705 and a 74141 Nixie driver chip. It worked, but the CPU wouldn’t run at 32 KHz like I wanted for power savings (I found later that only one special unobtanium version of their HC705 CPU runs at 32 KHz). I ended up switching to a PIC16F872 chip, which had a good low-power 32 KHz operating mode. I also switched to TD62083 high-voltage cathode driver chips. Both these parts were available in tiny TSSOP packages suitable for a wristwatch.

I built a breadboard two-digit watch circuit using DIP parts and the power supply cannibalized from the four-digit clock prototype. I spent a fair amount of time developing the software and the power control hardware. The power supply ended up being current-regulated rather than voltage regulated, which saves power since no anode voltage-dropping resistors are needed. Some software tricks were used to get the multiplexed display to be flicker-free with a measly 8192 instructions per second.

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David Forbes

When David’s Nixie watch displays time, it gives you hours and minutes separately. Since Nixies aren’t exactly efficient, the display isn’t on all of the time. Instead, David used a tilt sensor to trigger the Nixies briefly when you twist your wrist.

Eventually, Steve Wozniak found one of David’s watches in a computer museum, fell in love, and then bought one. Steve basically became David’s celebrity salesman.

David still makes Nixie watches today, and the Nixie watch has become such a trend that creators all over the world have taken David’s idea and made their own interpretations. The watch I own is pretty much a clone of David’s idea, right down to the twist to display function.

Nixie All The Things

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Griffin Riley

David made other fun gadgets, too, including a coat that’s a giant video display and the Nixie tube speedometer. David loves his old Volvo, and he has seemingly put Nixies in everything, so a Nixie instrument cluster was only a natural progression.

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David Forbes and his video coat. Credit: David Forbes

The speedometer is really just more of that David magic from decades of programming computers and building Nixie devices. The tubes are attached to a custom board, which communicates with an ECU-like computer, which gets its inputs from the Volvo’s accessories. The computer interprets the inputs and dispatches them to the Nixies.

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Crucially, David told me, his Nixie instrument cluster requires around 200 volts to run, just like those old Nixie clocks. That voltage is achieved through the use of a converter.

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Mercedes Streeter

Here’s another close-up for your viewing pleasure:

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Griffin Riley

David says he made his Nixie speedometer a few years ago, and it is able to be transferred to different classic cars. Unfortunately, the Nixie instrument cluster is far more complex than the Nixie watch, and he says it would require an entire business and manufacturing facility to sell them. That said, if you want one of David’s watches, visit his website!

Technically, you could make your own Nixie speedometer, but it won’t be like David’s. In 2023, the website Nixies.us published an article on making a Nixie speedometer that doesn’t interface with the car at all and uses a built-in GPS to read speed. David made his instrument cluster before this one came around, and David’s is also more comprehensive, as it’s an entire instrument cluster. But if you have a 3D printer and some maker skills, you can make your own! A project like this is well beyond my skill set, sadly.

I stand by my claim that David’s Nixie instrument cluster is the coolest speedometer on the planet. The pictures just don’t do it justice. There was something about seeing the warm glow of the Nixies in person that just hit so right. Is it at all necessary or even practical? No, cars have had fine instrumentation since forever. But it is gorgeous, fun, and puts smiles on faces. I agree with David, every car should have the option for a Nixie instrument cluster.

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Top graphic images: Mercedes Streeter; Griffin Riley

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Slow Joe Crow
Slow Joe Crow
1 month ago

I’m glad there are people who make stuff because it’s fun. I’m old enough to have seen nixie tubes in early copiers. Personally I’m more analog so I have sudden urge to buy a Curta calculator

Jonah B.
Member
Jonah B.
1 month ago
Reply to  Slow Joe Crow

Oh man, I’ve had Curta as a saved search on eBay for ages but haven’t pulled the trigger yet.

TDI in PNW
TDI in PNW
1 month ago

That is one incredible, home-brewed car modification. That looks so freaking cool! What a fantastic story too. So much detail.

Well done!

Kevin Cheung
Kevin Cheung
1 month ago

Now I really want a nixie dash for my car, plus a VFD graph for the EV regen/power display! Plus a bank of metallic toggle switches for all the interior stuff. One can dream though…….

Slower Louder
Member
Slower Louder
1 month ago

I thoroughly enjoyed this article and it has some fun comments too. I like all the praise of impracticality. I don’t live in the expensive watch world but I’m aware that some fancy watches are complicated to the point of being ridiculous. I have a couple of reasonably priced watches whose graphics are beautiful but which can’t be read in dim light. I know my damn phone will tell me the time but I enjoy looking at my not very legible watches. Impractical technology fans represent!

Scoutdude
Scoutdude
1 month ago

Worlds collide once again. I knew Forbes was going to be in this story the second I saw the Nixies.

Fuzzyweis
Member
Fuzzyweis
1 month ago

That’s pretty sweet, I’d imagine the actual value in time/knowledge/effort severely outweighs the car, lol, a few bulbs fail and it’s totaled.

TheHairyNug
TheHairyNug
1 month ago

The only instrument cluster for a Lemons car that is cooler than dropping in a C4 digital dash

1978fiatspyderfan
Member
1978fiatspyderfan
1 month ago

That speedometer is similar to what Dr Who should be using in the Tardis. And since it just has to display and not be accurate, good times. Anyone ever wonder why Dr Who time machine never looked newer than Britain in the 1800s?

H4llelujah
H4llelujah
1 month ago

It’s the instrumentation nerd in my talking here, but this is the sickest article I’ve read this entire year.

Cerberus
Member
Cerberus
1 month ago

That is sick! I briefly thought of doing a nixie display for the boat I wanted to build that has a kind of Mid Century theme, but don’t know how I’d do it and I read that they were fragile in regards to shock. Apparently, that’s not correct if they’re surviving being in cars and watches.

Also, maybe it’s my display, but that looks like turquoise to me, not teal. Teal is more green.

Rick Cavaretti
Rick Cavaretti
1 month ago

Nostalgia for the few aside, you do realize that those of us in the electronics industry laugh at these things. They show what time period you’re from, and one certain guy I know, is convinced they’ll be making a comeback. He’s been sitting on an extensive collection of new elements since 1978…he’s a lot older than I am. I’m sure his estate will be selling them at some point. The parts are in Los Angeles, keep an eye on Ebay.

Last edited 1 month ago by Rick Cavaretti
Cerberus
Member
Cerberus
1 month ago

I just deleted my reply because this is much nicer than my response to the tone of the post and makes the point that it’s fun. Nostalgia? Most of us weren’t even alive when these were popular and they weren’t common consumer items that I’ve ever seen, so there’s little to no connection to childhood or an idealized era. I don’t think I’ve seen them from anything in-period outside of old Cold War/sci-fi movies.

1978fiatspyderfan
Member
1978fiatspyderfan
1 month ago
Reply to  Rick Cavaretti

Be serious a watch is an affectation, we already have time on our phone who wears a watch except to display ones feathers like a peacock or show are derriere like a baboon?

Rebadged Asüna Sunrunner
Rebadged Asüna Sunrunner
1 month ago

I mean, I don’t want to always be pulling out my phone just to check the time. Much easier to just glance at the wrist! At any rate, I don’t think my $15 Casio is much of an affectation

Cheap Bastard
Member
Cheap Bastard
1 month ago

Which makes for the more impressive display; A $20 plastic Timex Ironman or a baboon’s derriere?

Pretty sure most people would agree it’s the baboon.

Gilbert Wham
Gilbert Wham
1 month ago
Reply to  Cheap Bastard

Neither: it’s actually a gorilla wearing a fake Rolex.

Cheap Bastard
Member
Cheap Bastard
1 month ago
Reply to  Gilbert Wham

So aside from that are you liking Florida?

Bleeder
Member
Bleeder
1 month ago
Reply to  Rick Cavaretti

Next you’re going to tell me that you industry guys would laugh at my sundial watch!
It works most of the day as long as I know which direction to face.

GENERIC_NAME
GENERIC_NAME
1 month ago

I like Nixie tubes, but I think split-flap displays would be a better solution here.

Nlpnt
Member
Nlpnt
1 month ago
Reply to  GENERIC_NAME

Or – hear me out – sweep needles pointing to numbers printed on the background.

Angry Bob
Member
Angry Bob
1 month ago

I had dreams of building an ESP32 based Nixie tube alarm clock that syncs with my Google calendar, but tubes I can see with my glasses off are way expensive. So I’m using a big LED segment display instead, and an ooga-horn for the alarm. Not as cool, but sufficiently nerdy.

The Woz tie-in is awesome. My hero. I owe my career and passions to him.

1978fiatspyderfan
Member
1978fiatspyderfan
1 month ago
Reply to  Angry Bob

I found out who Was is by watching TBBT.

Bkp
Member
Bkp
1 month ago

Really really love this!

If I wore watches, I’d totally want to rock a Nixie tube watch.

A Real Bobby Dazzler
Member
A Real Bobby Dazzler
1 month ago

Ah, this piece makes me so happy. When I saw your post on this, I knew, just knew, that a Mercedes deep dive article was coming our way soon. Now I want a nixie timer that chronically counts down to ‘007’, stops a resets to a randomly chosen amount.

Damon Oresky
Damon Oresky
1 month ago

Aerospace testing loved these since the 50’s and even thru the 90’s. They last forever and get the job done.

Stryker_T
Member
Stryker_T
1 month ago

that’s so fucking cool

KevinB
KevinB
1 month ago

Also used on Goldfinger’s nuclear bomb.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XBIZQcVMaNo

Ostronomer
Member
Ostronomer
1 month ago
Reply to  KevinB

Three James Bond references in one day! I’m down =)

Zipn Zipn
Member
Zipn Zipn
1 month ago

Awesome. At first I thought they were LED mock-NIXIE tubes running low DC voltage like those cheap clocks you can find on Amazon, but I see they’re proper vacuum tubes with a high voltage supply.

“WELL DONE SIR”, I say, “WELL DONE INDEED!”

Last edited 1 month ago by Zipn Zipn
Toecutter
Member
Toecutter
1 month ago

If I were retired with unlimited freetime, I’d be heavily tempted to use this to make EV displays(speed, rpm, amps, volts, range ect) for classic car conversions. For cars pre-1970, it would look so damned good.

1978fiatspyderfan
Member
1978fiatspyderfan
1 month ago
Reply to  Toecutter

I am a bit skeptical of using high consumption electronics in a EV where range is still a thing. Maybe a gas powered generator to run the dashboard might be more unique.

Space
Space
1 month ago

Nuclear powered would be even more unique.

AssMatt
Member
AssMatt
1 month ago

Lil Nixie says “I am not a clock!”

Professor Chorls
Professor Chorls
1 month ago

This makes me so incredibly tingly in the dingly.

Drew
Member
Drew
1 month ago

That is indeed the coolest dash of all time. I’ve never wanted a specific dashboard until now.

Rob Stercraw
Rob Stercraw
1 month ago

That’s completely ridiculous and I absolutely love it.

10001010
Member
10001010
1 month ago

Well now I want a Nixie gauge cluster in my car!

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