I've done this once with a nixie which had two electrodes shorted with 
sputter and twice with dual-triodes in an amp where a whisker of grid had 
joined the anode.

I used a charged capacitor for the nixie and a motorcycle battery for the 
triodes....I was a student at the time and rode a bike!

A friend had a VFD with a similar problem - I told him this trick and it 
worked for him too.

I've done it on a membrane keyboard that must have grown whiskers and 
joined two elements.

It all depends upon the resistance of the short, whether you use a battery 
(low ohm) or a capacitor charged to 300v (high ohm)

If the short is caused by two numbers inside the nixie actually touching 
due to movement then you're out of luck. 
Tapping or thumping may dislodge the short, current would only permanently 
weld the pieces together.

best of luck,
Andrew

On Monday, June 10, 2024 at 6:09:48 PM UTC+1 Mac Doktor wrote:

>
> On Jun 8, 2024, at 7:50 PM, gregebert <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> If it's several ohms or more, you can try zapping it like a fuse
>
>
> That old trick. I've never had to use it before. We'll see what happens.
>
>
> Terry Bowman, KA4HJH
> "The Mac Doctor"
>
> https://www.astarcloseup.com
>
> “...the book said something astonishing, a very big thought. The stars, it 
> said, were suns but very far away. The Sun was a star but close up.”—Carl 
> Sagan, "The Backbone Of Night", *Cosmos*, 1980
>
>
>

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