I seem to recall there was some discussion on the life expectancy of IV-9 numitrons some time ago.
In 2015 I built a number of clocks with these tubes, and they started failing last year. The clock in the picture is on my bench now, the three good tubes were replaced in November last year. So today all 6 tubes will be replaced. I have replaced all 6 tubes on a few other clocks also. One or more segments will no longer light up, and I do not see any blackening of the glass tube (The black you see in the picture is my permanent marker, s I will not replace the wrong tube when I disconnect the power).
The tubes are driven directly from a 4511 chip on a 5V power line.
There does not seem to be any order in which they fail, so I do not have the feeling that any of the tubes are significantly impacted by thermal stresses from flashing on and off. I would say based on my experience with them, the expected lifespan is about 7 years of continues use.
Bill v

Hi Chris,
The numitrons are driven by a 4511 decoder, and according to their data sheets the max. output at that voltage is 4.1 V, so that is well within specification for the tube. Yes, I agree, lowering the voltage even further should increase lifespan.
Bill v
From: neoni...@googlegroups.com <neoni...@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of Chris
Sent: Saturday, March 04, 2023 8:19 AM
To: neonixie-l <neoni...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: [neonixie-l] Re: IV-9 numitron lifespan
Hi,
While i am not sure for the IV9 numitrons have a look at the DA2300 lifetime expectancy,

Basically reducing the voltage increases the life expectancy exponentially.
So i usually run my numitrons at 4.5V or lower and have had no issues so far.
On Friday, March 3, 2023 at 8:05:48 PM UTC+1 theold...@gmail.com wrote:
I seem to recall there was some discussion on the life expectancy of IV-9 numitrons some time ago.
In 2015 I built a number of clocks with these tubes, and they started failing last year. The clock in the picture is on my bench now, the three good tubes were replaced in November last year. So today all 6 tubes will be replaced. I have replaced all 6 tubes on a few other clocks also. One or more segments will no longer light up, and I do not see any blackening of the glass tube (The black you see in the picture is my permanent marker, s I will not replace the wrong tube when I disconnect the power).
The tubes are driven directly from a 4511 chip on a 5V power line.
There does not seem to be any order in which they fail, so I do not have the feeling that any of the tubes are significantly impacted by thermal stresses from flashing on and off. I would say based on my experience with them, the expected lifespan is about 7 years of continues use.
Bill v
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Using a current limiter sounds like a LOT of circuitry, 7 times the number of tubes? I simply use a forward biased diode to drop the voltage, about 0.7 for a standard silicon diode, and about 0.3 for a Schottky. That requires only one or perhaps two diodes for the whole set of tubes. Perhaps not as accurate, but definitely a whole lot simpler.

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Martin,
How did you do that? (schematic)
Problem with a pot (or any resistor) is that you would need one for each element (7 per tube) since you cannot put one in the common line. Each filament draws about 22mA, so depending on the number displayed, the current would be anywhere between 44 and 154 mA. This would result in different voltage drops depending on the number displayed. It would result in uneven light output. Same reason why you could not use a single current regulator pre tube, but one per filament would be needed. A voltage regulator (such as a simple diode) does not have that disadvantage.
Bill v
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There are two ways to solve this problem.
1. Software, but as the author of the topic, there is no software and the possibility of editing it (I
I think so), then method number 2 remains.
2. The 4511 chip has a wide power supply range from 3-16 volts. Put the power regulator and turn it up to 4 volts, which will change the output power of the lamp filaments accordingly.
Checked more than once.вторник, 7 марта 2023 г. в 17:02:08 UTC+2, theold...@gmail.com:
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Not as easy as that sounds.
If you want to use software (I presume PWM) you cant use a 4511 anymore since their greatest advantage (besides the BCD to 7 segment decoding) is its latch function. No way to implement any software based dimming. This would require a very drastic hardware redesign.
Turning the 5V line down would work, but may cause issues with the rest of your circuit. A dedicated supply for the 4511’s could work, but depending on the final setting, there would be a discord in logic levels between the rest of the circuit and the 4511. Nasty, could result in unreliable communications. Level shifters could fix that, but wow, we are getting complicated again.
The diode is still the best solution in my mind. Working with silicon and Schottky diodes you can obtain steps of 0.3V, 0.6V, 0.9V, 1.0V, 1.2V etc. Some diodes have slightly different forward voltage drops, so with a bit of searching you can obtain a lot of very simple options. Using jumpers of DIP switches you can even make it very simple to adjust. Why all the complicated solutions?
Bill v
From: neoni...@googlegroups.com <neoni...@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of Batareyka
Sent: Tuesday, March 07, 2023 10:19 AM
To: neonixie-l <neoni...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: [neonixie-l] Re: IV-9 numitron lifespan
There are two ways to solve this problem.
1. Software, but as the author of the topic, there is no software and the possibility of editing it (I
I think so), then method number 2 remains.
2. The 4511 chip has a wide power supply range from 3-16 volts. Put the power regulator and turn it up to 4 volts, which will change the output power of the lamp filaments accordingly.
Checked more than once.
вторник, 7 марта 2023 г. в 17:02:08 UTC+2, theold...@gmail.com:
Martin,
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If you send me the schematic (with any modifications you may want) and preferred board size and shape, I can create board files for you.
Bill v
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I just actually realized I was totally wrong with my earlier statement about the 4511. If you look at the truth table for this chip you see it has a blanking input (pin 4, ^BI). That would make it actually very easy to implement software dimming by simply tying all of them to a mpu pin coded with PWM. On my own clock this line is already connected to the PIC, so I should be all set to implement dimming. Just never thought of using it that way.
Amazing where a bit of discussion can lead you!
Bill v
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I just actually realized I was totally wrong with my earlier statement about the 4511. If you look at the truth table for this chip you see it has a blanking input (pin 4, ^BI). That would make it actually very easy to implement software dimming by simply tying all of them to a mpu pin coded with PWM. On my own clock this line is already connected to the PIC, so I should be all set to implement dimming. Just never thought of using it that way.
Amazing where a bit of discussion can lead you!
Bill v
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