With any nixie tube, you can figure out the pinout yourself with a 
high-voltage supply (200 volts or more), and a series resistor to limit the 
current. It wont hurt the tube if you apply voltage to the "wrong" pins as 
long as you limit the current. I've done this many times when it would take 
me longer to go in the house to pull up the datasheet than probe it with 
this method.

Make sure the resistor is big enough to limit the current to about 1 mA. 
Tubes will have a voltage drop around 130V, so a 200V supply with a 70K 
series resistor will keep you safe. Use a higher resistor for higher supply 
voltages. Connect the resistor to the + lead on the supply. You will 
experiment with the - lead from the power supply and the other end of the 
resistor. Best to use clip-leads.

Pick any 2 pins. You should see something glow. If not, then it's possible 
you found an internal pin that's not normally used. Any nixie tube with 
more than 11 pins will have these.

If you see a numeral glowing, then the negative lead has found that 
particular digit. Keep probing the other digits with the negative lead and 
make a note of the pinout.
If you were lucky and found all 10 digits, the resistor (which goes to the 
+ supply) is on the anode lead.
More likely, you will find a pin that glows in a strange shape with the 
negative lead. That's the anode. Move the resistor to this pin and then 
find the rest of the numeral cathodes.

Once you have the pins identified, you need to determine the cathode 
current. Unless the numerals are larger than 20mm or 0.8 inches  (lucky you 
if you found tubes that big !!!), the current will be less than 3mA. I'd 
use as small a current necessary to get a nice even glow, and then add 
about 10-20% to allow for aging.

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