I worked in a printed circuit factory at one time, as a silk-screen
printer. At times I'd do other jobs, like cutting the blanks, using the
presses, drilling boards, flow-soldering. My work bench was right next
to an open cyanide tank used for gold plating edge connectors. A hideous
woman with
The video says "A vintage technology unseen in over 30 years." I am
speechless.
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That is as maybe Jeff, but when was there ever a period when an example
was unseen?
On 18/03/2021 17:31, Jeff Walton wrote:
When was the last time that someone built an IN-12?... Yep, 30 years ago.
Jeff
Original message
From: Ⓙⓞⓗⓝ Ⓢⓜⓞⓤⓣ
Date: 3/18/21 12:12 PM (GMT-06:00
Your point being, Aiden? An invisible vintage *technology* which this
forum has been showing glowing examples of, for how many years now? I
had no idea I could not see anyone else's nixie clocks. It seems to me
you are trying to say that you do something extraordinary,
*technologically-speaking
I migrated the Smartsocket group to https://groups.io/g/smartsockets
about a year ago. Please rejoin there, as Yahoo no longer hold any
project files and that Yahoo group is defunct. If the files you are
after were in the old group, then they should be accessible through the
new one.
Smartsoc
On 29/03/2021 20:10, Nick Andrews wrote:
Yahoo deleted everything some time ago. Anything not copied is gone
forever.
…unless of course one had the foresight to anticipate and migrate
everything to a new group.
https://groups.io/g/smartsockets is the place to go, Nicholas,
John S
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You r
As some of you know, I am fond of vintage coin slot amusement machines.
If they contain nixie tubes, then what's not to like even more?
The Golden Mint slot machine was made by Sturgeon Electronic
Manufacturing Co. Ltd. of Bognor-Regis, Sussex, England in the 1960s.
There were 240 pennies in a
Resent in a new thread…
As some of you know, I am fond of vintage coin slot amusement machines.
If they contain nixie tubes, then what's not to like even more?
The Golden Mint slot machine was made by Sturgeon Electronic
Manufacturing Co. Ltd. of Bognor-Regis, Sussex, England in the 1960s.
T
As many of you know, I have been a moderator of this group for some
years. I now have an average of six months left to live. I am not having
any more cancer chemo, which would only give me another six months even
if I did.
I don't mind dying, it is the sadness of leaving my wife Jean alone tha
A huge thank you to all those who have offered to send letters to my
wife for me. I shall be writing to you all in due course. I shall see my
son, who has procured the stationery for me, on Sunday. I can then start
to organise things.
If there is anyone in the Middle East, or Far East. China,
Neon ring counter clock | Clock, Electronics design
On 14/08/2020 21:21, 'orange_glow_fan' via neonixie-l wrote:
Has anyone build a Nixie Clock using a similar technic ? Hard wired with
no chassis?
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I know many of you like the steampunk look and so might forgive the
off-topic picture.
This item was in use every day between 1914 and 1988. Can you guess what
it is? I bet some clever clogs here knows.
John S
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The steampunk assembly indeed powered a lighthouse, on the Mediterranean
island of Menorca at the promontory of Cavalleria.
The caption on what is now a museum exhibit at the lighthouse says:
"Chance 85 mm system, oil steam lighting equipment. It was in operation
between 1914 and 1988. The las
Wasn't this guy trading as USmintquarters or similar?
John
On 6 Dec 2020, at 20:08, Nick wrote:
I certainly didn't buy all the 900 - I bought a few hundred, but so
did others on this group - he wanted USD 20/tube - you could negotiate
on bulk.
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I spent 45 years in design of one sort or another, from model-making for
museums, films and the telly, architecture, interior design, museum and
permanent exhibition design to graphic design and advertising. I don't
suppose my opinion counts for anything, however I really like the
compressed di
So you want to stare at a nixie clock all day and admire how big its
digits are? Surely you should get out more? Oh, I forgot, we can't, can we?
John S
On 17/12/2020 21:47, Nick Andrews wrote:
TOO LARGE, say what? This reminds of the doinks at Best Buy or
somewhere, when you're looking at a T
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