Here's a photo of a simulated Dekatron clock, courtesy of John Smout and Konfabulator, using photos of actual Dekatron tubes.
Here is the tube on a Dekatron spinner circuit, shown on the website of Sphere Research Canadian Test Equipment Site, which sells nixies, Dekatrons, and other items.
www.sphere.bc.ca This site is a must for anyone interested in buying or learning about these displays.
This is a Panaplex display, a 7-segment, high voltage neon display popular in the 1970's, especially on gas pumps and NCR cash registers. They light up a bright orange-red. I have a unique clock which uses these, and the numbers are created not by an electronic circuit, but by rotating encoders driven by a 1 RPM electric motor. And Blasty, I bought it at a junk store in Bend.
But my favorite displays of all are lightguide displays, of which I have 5 waiting to be turned into a clock.
www.electricstuff.co.uk
