40 years ? How many hours per day are you running your tubes ?
Greg – my 1971 clock with Burroughs CK8754 nixie tubes ran 27/7/365 for over 35 years with no tube or digit failures. It used 74141 drivers driven at ~170 volts by a rectified line voltage doubler circuit using recommended anode resistors from the example circuits out of the Texas Instruments data book. During the life of the clock, there were a couple failures of the caps in the voltage doubler but no failures in the tubes or chips. The clock was basic with no steps to prevent cathode poisoning and the tubes were actually soldered with wrapped wire around the pins. The entire clock was point to point wiring.
While I can’t attest that the brightness was the same as in the beginning, the display tubes were still perfectly viewable with full digit coverage and easily visible in a room with windows. In the early life of the tubes, I did note that there were occasional blue arcs that occurred with reducing frequency as the tubes “broke in”. I think the arcing stopped sometime within the first year.
I came to the conclusion that a well designed nixie, which had good seal integrity, the right gases/doping and was operated within the specs could last a good long time.
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>During the life of the clock, there were a couple failures of the caps in the voltage doubler
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To the folks who are still running the "Giant Nixie Clock". From the early 1970's:
... as I recall it treated the tubes as 7-segment devices...Am I correct?
... They might be shorted to the back substrate and possibly even each other via the substrate...
The only NOS tubes that might have been around would be branded as Burroughs and not Ultronics. I actually had a couple Burroughs tubes NIB that I purchased back in 1970 or 1971 before I found the Ultronics tubes in the back of magazines for sale by the surplus houses. I have kicked myself for not keeping the new Burroughs tubes and the boxes as a pristine reference for 45 years later, but who would have thought that we would be talking about this so long after the fact. Even in 1971, the Ultronics tubes were all pulls from systems that had been in operation and bought up by liquidators.
The shadow on the substrate may even exist on a NOS tube depending on the burn-in process that was used and the doping mix of materials in the gas that were used for stabilizing and sealing preceded the burn-in.
From: 'jf...@my-deja.com' via neonixie-l [mailto:neoni...@googlegroups.com]
Sent: Tuesday, August 30, 2016 3:28 PM
To: neonixie-l
Subject: Re: [neonixie-l] Re: b7971 segment current
On Monday, August 29, 2016 at 9:31:39 PM UTC-7, A.J. Franzman wrote:
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