Allison wrote:
FYI: those things are considered rare as hens teeth as
most systems
that use them have burnt them out. One series of ARC (used in cessna
aircraft) radios had them as they were bright enough for day use
and I hear they cost about 100$+ per digit to replace.
Allison
Do you have any more specific model information regarding these aircraft radios (what is
the ARC series?):
Some time ago I noticed a small, somewhat-odd module of folded-up ~2 in. by ~6 in.
printed circuit boards with a row of 10 7-segment incandescent displays in the trash [*].
I pulled it out, out of curiosity. It really was trashed: no case, no identification,
mangled PCB interconnect wires, most of whatever it belonged in was gone. Turned out it
contained a 4004 processor and other MCS-4 support chips. Some reverse engineering,
application of appropriate supply voltages, assorted repairs (including constructing a
substitute for the faulty MCS-4 4201 clock generator IC) and it was a functioning embedded
4004 system, albeit quite useless as anything but a curio/artifact. By appearance and
function it is the digital control/display/front-end portion of a PLL-synthesised-tuning
avionics radio, perhaps a NAV/COM unit (standard dual side-by-side tuners, right side
tunes 108-118 MHz, left side 118-135 MHz (from the displays)). IC date codes are circa
1977. All the analog/RF stuff is missing. (I have since mounted it with a power supply to
make it into a '4004 display'. One can turn the knobs and push the buttons to
change the frequency display. The 4004 does all the processing between the knob inputs and
7-seg-display outputs, as well as feeding the divide-by-N factor to the missing PLL).
But I have wondered just what the make/model of the full unit is. Another distinguishing
characteristic is that it on both the far right and left sides there is a column of 3
square (~3/16") white pushbuttons for preset frequencies. Does any of this
description match the avionics units you have in mind?
[ * In the trash at the mentioned-in-earlier-messages radio museum. Barbarians. ]