These are unidirectional, single pulse dekatrons. This makes them a little easier to drive
than some other dekatrons. To just get one pulsing around is easy enough. Hook all
the cathodes together (except for the "normal cathode"), and connect the guides together
(pins 11 and 14). Hook the anode to a few hundred volts via an appropriate current
limiting resistor. You can ignore the auxiliary anode. To figure your current limiting
resistor, divide the desired current by the difference between your supply voltage and
the maintaining voltage. The minimum supply voltage is 300V, and the maintaining
voltage is 110V. The current the tube wants is 100 to 3000 microamps. If you have
a 450 volt supply, you could use a 1 megohm current limiting resistor to provide
(450 - 110) / 1,000,000 = .00034 amps, or 340 microamps. That would be a reasonable
starting value.
Then alternately ground the cathodes and the guides, with some overlap. You can do
this manually with a pair of switches, or electronically with transistors. The glow should
march around the dekatron, taking a step every time you switch between the cathodes
and the guides.
If you want to do counting and/or calculations, then it gets a little more intricate, and you
use the "normal cathode" and auxiliary anode to make sure the glow starts where you
want it to, and route one or more cathodes to separate circuits to detect when the glow
comes to them.
But the above should at least get you started.
- John