I notice in the Burroughs Bulletin N101 Nick posted that the block diagram 
on page 2 shows a core memory! Reference in the text to the "recirculation 
loop" leaves no doubt. I'm curious to know if anyone has ever seen a Nixie 
instrument with a core memory? Presumably they must have existed sometime, 
somewhere, but I would have thought the cost - together with the 
"recirculation loop" and write electronics - would be substantially more 
than a few BCD to decimal decoders, even in the days before TTL.

I do recall, however, that one of the Anita nixie calculators had a 
magnetic memory - a torsion delay line. It was kind of like a clock spring 
made out of stiff wire. An actuator would twist it at one end and the 
torsion wave would go round all the coils and appear at the other end some 
milliseconds later, where it was sensed and fed back to the beginning. So 
you could store data in it, like a very fast tape loop.

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