Originally posted in February, 2017

Numitrons are low voltage incandescent display devices perfected and marketed by RCA (see RCA advert above) in the early 1970โ€™s.  I would call this a bridge technology as the display is incandescent, but can be driven by integrated circuits.   They were quickly displaced by solid state LED (light emitting diode) devices from the mid 1970โ€™s onward.

This is a Numitron:

RCA-Numitron-Advert

The look and feel of a Numitron display appeals to me and I wanted to reboot my building and soldering skills , so I decided to build a Numitron clock.  I based my clock on the RCA DR2000 which has a beautiful 15mm display height and a board and parts kit (no longer available) from Richard White.

And here is an image series of the finished clock just before, at, and just after 0000, January 1, 2015:

Numitron-New-Year-2014-059
Numitron-New-Year-2015-000
Numitron-New-Year-2015-001

From a Time and Frequency perspective, it is fascinating to watch how the clock corrects on a daily basis.  It is locked to my local 60Hz AC line frequency, which means it can be as much as +-8 seconds at at any given second.  However during a 24 hr period, it will be corrected and never accumulates any more error than +- 8 seconds.  It has been running for six weeks continuously as of this writing and it is about +3 seconds (vs my  GPS locked UTC clock).  However earlier today it was less than 1/2 second ahead.


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