Wow, thanks for all the info! I'd love to see examples of driving circuitry
if it's not too much trouble. I've made PCBs and such before so aside from
potentially jolting myself I'm up to the challenge.
Anything I produce (code, schematics/PCBs) will be posted to my blog as
open-source material.
Thanks again,
Anders
On Wed, Jan 1, 2020, 8:34 PM Brent Hilpert via cctalk <cctalk at classiccmp.org>
wrote:
On 2020-Jan-01, at 2:42 PM, Anders Nelson via cctalk
wrote:
I snagged one of these Nixie-like displays (from
a calculator I assume)
and
I'd like to light it up. Does anyone know
where I might find the
datasheet
for it? Google hasn't turned up anything.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/264110638970
Any help is appreciated!
7-segment multiplexed multi-digit gas-discharge display.
Those Sperry types weren't very prevalent, I'm not surprised you haven't
found a datasheet.
I'm being a little presumptuous in specifying gas-disharge, it certainly
appears to be, but the ebay pics are a little small.
There was another series of GD displays from Sperry, and another from
Beckman, which were more prevalent.
Assuming it is GD:
I have an example of one that appears to be of similar construction to
yours in this calculator:
http://madrona.ca/e/eec/calcs/SanyoICC83.html
Given yours says made in Japan, I wonder if they be from the same OEM.
I can send the schematic if you wish, for an example of drive circuitry.
It needs a little reformatting and conversion to pdf first, so let me know
if interested.
I have other calculators and schematics using the Beckman displays
(7-segment, multiplexed, multi-digit, gas-discharge).
They could also be comparitive examples for drive circuitry.
Multiplexed gas discharge displays could be a little finicky to drive, to
keep down anomylous ghosting and partial ignition.
In the absence of a datasheet, your first task would be to distinguish the
digit anodes from the segment cathodes.
You might be able to do it visually by looking at the internal
construction.
Otherwise experimentation with two probes connected to a 150-200V power
supply with a series limiting resistor of 200K or maybe even higher to
start with.