On 2015-May-29, at 3:54 PM, Jules Richardson wrote:
JOOI, does anyone know when Panaplex 7-segment
displays started going the way of the dodo, to be replaced with LED displays (and, on the
back of that, what were the advantages of a Panaplex-type display over an LED one?)
Panaplex and other 7-seg gas discharge displays were used in calculators up to the
mid-70s. Actually one of the last uses in a calculator might be the HP-9815 (1975/6):
http://www.cs.ubc.ca/~hilpert/eec/calcs/HP9815A.html
They were mostly used in desktops for the sake of the larger digit size but there were
some pocket/handheld calcs that used the smaller versoions. In calcs, they were largely
superseded by vacuum-flourescent displays which were easier to drive, had a longer life,
and could also be made with bright, large digits.
Heathkit used them in some items into perhaps the late 70s.
They were also extensively in arcade/pinball games, as I'm sure many will recall.
I'm not sure how late they were being incorporated into new designs in that arena.
In their heyday (early/mid-70s) I'd say they could produce a larger, more uniform,
better contrast, display than the then-early LEDs. Would have to look at specs and some
calculations but they were probably more energy efficient than LEDs.
I just saved a few boards from a dumpster with such
displays on (they're actually Beckman ones, not Burroughs), but I was a little
surprised to see IC dates into 1981; I thought by then things had moved over to LED.
Yes, to be accurate, Panaplex was a Burroughs trademark. There was the Panaplex I series
which had a metal grid anode in front of the segments for the anode, and the
more-prevalent Panaplex II which has a conductive coating on the glass for the anode.
The Burroughs and Beckman displays are different in design. Generically, I refer to them
as 7-segment gas-discharge displays. There were some lesser-produced designs from Japanese
manufacturers.
Generally, their failing seems to be the cathode poisoning common to all neon bulbs, and
'burning' of the thin conductive anode coating where applicable.
I'm almost certain that they're from old gas
pumps - maybe the displays are just more readable in bright sunlight than LED?
(there's a sticker on one of the PSU boards with a 'shipping date' in 1999)
Funny, I was about to mention that use. I remember them in use on gas pumps up to
somewhere around the late-80s or early-90s. One of my bike routes takes me on a dike
behind an industrial area. Sometime around the mid-90s I remember there being a yard
filled with scrapped pumps, a lot of them missing the display/keyboard cover, so all the
displays mounted on the big controller boards could be seen. I wanted to rescue some of
them but never got around to pursuing it. I was kind of dissuaded by the thought they had
mostly seen a long and continuous service life and may now(then) be of questionable
reliability.