Here's what Numitron tubes in an actual product look like

Ғылым және технология

Still just... not great.
Original Video: • The Numitron: An obvio...

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  • @TechnologyConnextras
    @TechnologyConnextras23 күн бұрын

    I did put it back together

  • @FuS3D86

    @FuS3D86

    23 күн бұрын

    why

  • @loricat5606

    @loricat5606

    23 күн бұрын

    And there was much rejoicing?

  • @marcogenovesi8570

    @marcogenovesi8570

    23 күн бұрын

    that's a relief

  • @GameDesignerJDG

    @GameDesignerJDG

    23 күн бұрын

    Very glad to know that, actually.

  • @TheMrMaxx

    @TheMrMaxx

    23 күн бұрын

    Maybe you could send it to BigClive so that he could reverse engineer the circuit 😊

  • @Huntracony
    @Huntracony23 күн бұрын

    I like the implication that the concept of 'off' has a patent pending.

  • @Games_and_Music

    @Games_and_Music

    23 күн бұрын

    You know those people, they're always "on" it!

  • @gcewing

    @gcewing

    23 күн бұрын

    We can count ourselves lucky that the patent on "on" has expired. It's such a breath of fresh air being able to turn things on without having to pay royalties to some greedy corporation. We'll just have to leave them on until the "off" patent has run its course.

  • @KairuHakubi

    @KairuHakubi

    23 күн бұрын

    @@gcewing you know as well as i do that patent trolls are just as often moneygrubbing individuals.

  • @Hans-gb4mv

    @Hans-gb4mv

    23 күн бұрын

    Love to know what the patent application is

  • @jimroberts3009

    @jimroberts3009

    21 күн бұрын

    Ho ho, of course the patent pending is for the whole machine but a good joke anyway. 😊

  • @blast_brothers592
    @blast_brothers59223 күн бұрын

    I like how the "actual product" is only marginally more professional looking (even on the outside) than your quick hackjob

  • @orbatos

    @orbatos

    23 күн бұрын

    This was weirdly common in 70's hardware. I'm restoring a found electrostatic headstone amp and despite the original price it doesn't look much better than this inside.

  • @tubaman66

    @tubaman66

    23 күн бұрын

    @@orbatos Agree - looks like a very typical '70s bit of electronics.

  • @nickwallette6201

    @nickwallette6201

    23 күн бұрын

    Yeah, we're totally spoiled by the availability of complex ICs, dirt-cheap professional PCB fabrication, and ubiquitous CAD software. You can tell the PCB here was hand-drawn, hand-cut, and hand-assembled -- because nobody with a budget less than GE's could afford anything more sophisticated than that. This was only slightly after the majority of electronic devices were assembled with point-to-point wiring -- no PCB at all. I do not miss anything about this era.

  • @treelineresearch3387

    @treelineresearch3387

    23 күн бұрын

    @@orbatos Compared to a point-to-point wired TV or radio from just 10 years earlier, even this low-volume early 70s construction looks really high tech. It's definitely not as nice as HP or Tek in terms of build quality, but not much is.

  • @Zolbat

    @Zolbat

    23 күн бұрын

    that filter piece looks like an afterthought, even though it's pretty important for its job

  • @zaprodk
    @zaprodk23 күн бұрын

    18:51 Soldering iron melted the jacket on the large filter capacitor while the green wires was soldered onto the post.

  • @bobweiss8682

    @bobweiss8682

    23 күн бұрын

    Yep. A mark of quality construction....

  • @timduncan6750

    @timduncan6750

    23 күн бұрын

    Came to say the same - looks exactly like the side of a soldering iron tip.

  • @FerralVideo

    @FerralVideo

    23 күн бұрын

    Yep. I've left that same mark more than once.

  • @wobblysauce

    @wobblysauce

    23 күн бұрын

    Sign of the builder.

  • @paulstubbs7678

    @paulstubbs7678

    23 күн бұрын

    @@wobblysauce Used a real soldering iron, no wave or reflow junk here

  • @leocomerford
    @leocomerford23 күн бұрын

    Honestly they still look largely fine to me, even when displaying 88. The misplaced decimal point is a bit janky but nothing too unbearable by the usual standards of multi-segment displays. I’d guess that one thing which particularly helped to kill these was their power consumption. In Bob Johnstone’s _We Were Burning_ he mentions one reason why the Japanese carmakers were desperate for new illuminated-display technologies: the single incandescent bulb in their car radios was consuming more power than the entire rest of the radio system combined, and it had a much worse lifespan to boot. A display with multiple incandescent filaments for each single digit can’t have been too attractive to anyone building something which might need to run off a battery. See also the Apollo program messing around with promethium paint.

  • @Pentium100MHz

    @Pentium100MHz

    23 күн бұрын

    There weren't good alternatives at the time though. Nixies need high voltage, VFDs also need higher voltage than what's normally used in digital circuits and they also need AC for the filament (running the filament on DC especially with low anode voltage will make one side of the display darker than the other) .LEDs were tiny and expensive. As for the appearance - they look OK to me. I don't care if the numbers are a bit crooked or that the decimal point looks like an x. I'm not a perfectionist.

  • @WalterBurton

    @WalterBurton

    23 күн бұрын

    The gross inefficiency, for sure, over the utility. Because if you actually used it (used that instrument), you would know that's what 88 looks like. But I get the finer critique, too. It's funny to think of the original designers and fabricators and how they would've laughed heartily if you told them their products were going to get this level of scrutiny.

  • @paulstubbs7678

    @paulstubbs7678

    23 күн бұрын

    I heard the military liked these as they were kind of day light viewable, unlike LED's or the day that almost needed a darkened room.

  • @MonkeyJedi99

    @MonkeyJedi99

    23 күн бұрын

    @@paulstubbs7678 I remember my first watch in 1077 or so had the res LED display which was unreadable in bright light. I lived in Phoenix, AZ at the time. The kind of place well known for being bright nearly every single day. So a wrist watch was a two-handed operation as the other hand had to shade the display.

  • @NaoPb

    @NaoPb

    22 күн бұрын

    ​@@Pentium100MHz I'm not particularly familiar with the VFDs of that time but I think it's interesting how car radio manufacturers largely adopted the technology at some point to where you couldn't find a radio that hadn't one.

  • @danglegrinder
    @danglegrinder22 күн бұрын

    That glare seems like it would be really annoying in a well lit darkroom

  • @MrJef06

    @MrJef06

    17 күн бұрын

    😂

  • @mikeselectricstuff
    @mikeselectricstuff23 күн бұрын

    Board would have been laid out using black crepe tapes of various widths, which made it easy to make curved tracks by pressing down with a finger, guiding it where you want. Pads would have been stick-on symbols or possibly rub-down transfers ( Letraset) Done at either x1 to make direct artwork, or at 2x size and photographically reduced. Double sided boards were done using red and blue translucent tapes, and seperated photographically. For simple low-detail boards like this, freehand drawing with ink pens on drafting film was also sometimes used.

  • @nezbrun872

    @nezbrun872

    23 күн бұрын

    I guess plated through hole wasn't a thing, or was prohibitively expensive! Presumably PCB rivets were used and soldered over.

  • @TheChipmunk2008

    @TheChipmunk2008

    23 күн бұрын

    @@nezbrun872 this exactly. Plated through cost more, through pins were cheaper

  • @TheChipmunk2008

    @TheChipmunk2008

    23 күн бұрын

    wouldn't surprise me if they etched the boards in house

  • @jrevillug

    @jrevillug

    23 күн бұрын

    To bridge the gap in knowledge... The image of the circuit, once drawn or taped, was copied to acetate. The boards have 'photo resist', and black lines on the acetate translate after exposure to light to an acid-resistant film. The copper is then etched away in the rest of the area, leaving a "printed" circuit board. Then drill the holes for the components, populate the board, and solder. The heavy solder across all the traces shows that it was "wave soldered", where the board is moved across a machine which maintains a wave of molten solder. In higher-end PCBs at the time, and on most boards now, the standard green colour is "solder resist", a layer deposited after etching so that the solder only sticks to the exposed terminal pads.

  • @marblemunkey

    @marblemunkey

    23 күн бұрын

    ​@jrevillug I had to do hand-etched boards for a project in my highschool electronics class in the late 90's. This was still basically the process then, but we had print (from a computer) and transfer mask which made it easier. For the channel owner, it looks like the spaced the tube's as far apart as they did because putting down traces by hand with them any closer would be a PITA.

  • @DrDeFord
    @DrDeFord23 күн бұрын

    4:30 Fortunately, if it’s going to be in a dark room, room light glare is less of a problem.

  • @nixel1324

    @nixel1324

    23 күн бұрын

    Especially with red light through a green-pass filter.

  • @Games_and_Music

    @Games_and_Music

    23 күн бұрын

    Exactly, i was just about to say this, but i made sure i wasn't "stealing" the comment from someone else. But yeah, like nixel also says, it's a dark room AND it will be flooded with red light, so there probably would be no glare at all for this specific machine. Although of course, it is a problem for other devices, but just not this particular one.

  • @dyhidrogenmonoxide

    @dyhidrogenmonoxide

    23 күн бұрын

    Yes, also looked for this comment. The green filter was probably intentional, as it would cut the glare to near zero in a red-lit room.

  • @xAcidxOtakux

    @xAcidxOtakux

    23 күн бұрын

    I was about to make this comment, glad I looked for it first.

  • @kaitlyn__L

    @kaitlyn__L

    22 күн бұрын

    @@nixel1324 which is probably exactly why the filter wasn't red or amber!

  • @ericduckman3135
    @ericduckman313523 күн бұрын

    at about 16:00 i'm hearing bigclive, "i will be back with the schematic, one moment please..."

  • @Allan_aka_RocKITEman

    @Allan_aka_RocKITEman

    20 күн бұрын

    👍😊

  • @AgentWaltonSimons
    @AgentWaltonSimons23 күн бұрын

    That burn on the big capacitor looks for all the world like someone slipped with the soldering iron at some point and caught it.

  • @mytube001

    @mytube001

    23 күн бұрын

    Looks more like a dead and dried pillbug to me! :D

  • @kenmore01

    @kenmore01

    23 күн бұрын

    They didn't slip, they weren't paying enough attention to where the soldering iron tip was...until they smelled it burning. Been there!

  • @DHealey

    @DHealey

    22 күн бұрын

    Came here to say the same thing

  • @DavidCookeZ80
    @DavidCookeZ8023 күн бұрын

    Since this is a darkroom timer, and you like connections, when we stopped using track tapes and started using CAD for PCB design the resulting files (Gerber) would drive a photoplotter: essentially an enlarger/reducer where the head could translate in x and y. The files would select an aperture (like a trace width or component pad) from a wheel of shapes and either flash the bulb (for a pad/symbol) or draw with the bulb on (for traces) to expose the film. We had a darkroom these machines lived in and the usual monochrome chemicals. The resulting plots would then get couriered to the PCB manufacturing place where they'd be used as masks for the photoresist on the copper-clad boards or make silk screens for lettering and other layers. These days we still use Gerber files, but they get rasterised for plotting in something more like a laser printer. In defence of Numitrons, at the time these things were more "futuristic" than the alternatives, and despite the failings were "cool". You do quickly get used to their quirks and the decimal point when reading them.

  • @gmr310
    @gmr31023 күн бұрын

    I'm still not sure why I watch 26min videos on things I don't really care about... But your content is so relaxing and easy to watch that I now know more about dishwashers and turn signals then I ever needed to know :P

  • @darkmagician2904

    @darkmagician2904

    23 күн бұрын

    Same, it reminds me of when a friend says " let's take it apart to see how it works." But the friend was an electrician or something.

  • @jerodewert8334

    @jerodewert8334

    23 күн бұрын

    Thanks to these informative videos I now was my dishes with hotter water, some soap for the pre wash, dry by opening and letting the heat do it's magic. Cleaner dishes! Done faster!

  • @nrdesign1991

    @nrdesign1991

    23 күн бұрын

    @@jerodewert8334 Automagically! Through the magic of buying two of them!

  • @patrickchen2878

    @patrickchen2878

    23 күн бұрын

    I use some of his long videos as sleeping background noise😂

  • @fintux

    @fintux

    23 күн бұрын

    I've always been fascinated by mechanisms, electronics etc. Even as a kid I liked taking apart things like old washing machines and to see how they worked - well for the part that I was able to (the screws were usually very tight and also quite often I had to e.g. ask my dad to explain stuff). Turns out I like also watch other people taking apart devices and figuring out how the work.

  • @SenkJu
    @SenkJu23 күн бұрын

    RCA made another Numitron called the DTF104B which solves some of the problems these tubes exhibit. They are top viewing so reflections are much less of an issue. I don't think they made many of them, though. Probably never made it past pre-production. Edit: I put a short video of one on my channel for those who are interested in seeing it.

  • @goosenotmaverick1156

    @goosenotmaverick1156

    23 күн бұрын

    Im headed to check that out shortly, thanks! Seems you have some other stuff I need to check out. 😎

  • @0106johnny

    @0106johnny

    23 күн бұрын

    I have a bunch (about 20) of the top down Numitron tubes at home, new old stock that I found in my grandpas basement. I had planned to built a clock with them at some point, maybe I'll go ahead and do it

  • @valvemonky4734

    @valvemonky4734

    23 күн бұрын

    i have two clocks using DTF104B tubes they are quite difficult to find obtained 10 of them a few years ago made one 6 tube clock then was lucky enough to get 2 more recently and built another 6 tube clock

  • @valvemonky4734

    @valvemonky4734

    23 күн бұрын

    @@0106johnny there is a kit available if you have some of the DTF tubes from a fella called Richard scale here in the uk

  • @paulstubbs7678

    @paulstubbs7678

    23 күн бұрын

    I have a few in flat glass lidded dual in line packages, should have no issues like these. Actually I like the round tube artefacts, ads a bit of character and depth to the display, unlike modern ones that have to be ultra flat.

  • @cpm1003
    @cpm100323 күн бұрын

    According to Wikipedia, the 7492 is a divide-by-12 counter. It actually has separate /2 and /6 sections, and the /6 makes perfect sense for turning the 60Hz line voltage into 10Hz. The 7490 is a /10 counter to give seconds.

  • @SianaGearz

    @SianaGearz

    23 күн бұрын

    74928 is a 4-decade counter and a multiplexed output 7-segment display driver. Fancy, right? Datasheet for the original part is hard to come by, but MM74C928 should be close enough to make sense of the circuit.

  • @ChrisDreher

    @ChrisDreher

    23 күн бұрын

    ​@SianaGearz I think video was saying 7492A rather that 74928. Some manufacturers slapped letters at the end to show a revision or variant. 1970 also seems too early for a 7400 series part with a high number of 74928. However, I could be wrong.

  • @SianaGearz

    @SianaGearz

    23 күн бұрын

    @@ChrisDreher Ah right thank you, i brainfarted.

  • @jeffburrell7648

    @jeffburrell7648

    23 күн бұрын

    A 74LS92 is a divide by 12 counter. Usually the LS variant is the same as the standard TTL chip. Divide by 12 seems a bit odd in a device clocked by 60Hz - unless they used a full wave rectified waveform to give 120Hz.

  • @HenryLoenwind

    @HenryLoenwind

    23 күн бұрын

    @@jeffburrell7648 Of course they would. Ignoring one half-wave gives pretty choppy power, requiring fairly big capacitors to keep the DC from dropping out and bigger transformers to provide double the power during the non-ignored half-wave. We get away with this nowadays because we sprinkle the boards with capacitors and DC-DC converters everywhere.

  • @bjornroesbeke
    @bjornroesbeke23 күн бұрын

    I like how legible the digits are at 9:48 when the camera is out of focus. They almost look like regular 7-segment LEDs !

  • @Hirnspatz

    @Hirnspatz

    23 күн бұрын

    After reading your comment, I watched the video again without my glasses. Worked perfectly for me. 😉

  • @Alex-vr8gw

    @Alex-vr8gw

    23 күн бұрын

    Maybe the inventor needed, but never wore, glasses and thought it was brilliant.

  • @j.donaldson2758

    @j.donaldson2758

    23 күн бұрын

    Was looking to see if anyone else thought that. Putting a clouded filter on it might have literally covered up so many of the problems with this display technology.

  • @kevinpreid

    @kevinpreid

    23 күн бұрын

    ​@@j.donaldson2758 A filter like that would scatter the light - basically working like a projector screen. So either the filter would have be right in front of the filaments (which can't be done due to the round glass being in the way) or there would need to be lenses to make a rear-projection display (which would lose a lot of brightness).

  • @StuffJason437

    @StuffJason437

    23 күн бұрын

    The 7 segments were still legible regardless how much I unfocus my eyes ...

  • @user-bu4wg1ok5n
    @user-bu4wg1ok5n22 күн бұрын

    Back in 1985 I put a new FM station on the air, complete with a studio automation system. The automation was an early microprocessor setup that used IIRC, ten Numitrons in the programming display. Each day, the commercials and other events were programmed in using this display terminal. Within weeks of taking delivery, the Numitron filaments began to burn out. That sucked, because the tubes were soldered in, and it was a bugger to get to the bottom side of the circuit board to unsolder them. What's more, soldering and unsoldering connections repeatedly on circuit boards is a destructive process. The operators learned to 'read past' the bad segments, but you can only do that for so long, before too many segments are blown. I looked into finding sockets for these tubes, but never found any. I also looked into replacing them with large 7-segment LEDs, which were beginning to become available, but that wasn't practical either, for various reasons, mostly economic. I moved on to another job, without ever resolving the issue. I often wonder what the next engineer did.

  • @filipkohout4704

    @filipkohout4704

    5 күн бұрын

    Now every time I'll get passed some work from a previous guy I will think of you. Sometimes people really tried to do it, but things kinda suck every once in a while

  • @Vespuchian
    @Vespuchian21 күн бұрын

    Ah, the Numitron: the very best of 1930s tech made 40 years late.

  • @marshallberry8943
    @marshallberry894323 күн бұрын

    I think you inadvertantly found the perfect application of numitron displays by accident. That green filter cover i will bet anything it was supplied with either 2 or 3 of them. Green for developing panchromatic materials, you can use a specific shade of green partway through developing if you need to inspect the development. They could have had red and amber covers red for orthochromatif film and amber will generally be fine for darkroom printing paper.

  • @bobweiss8682
    @bobweiss868223 күн бұрын

    The weird devices are "snubber networks", which are an AC film capacitor with a series resistor. Used across switch contacts or thyristors to reduce the inductive spike when loads switch off.

  • @paulstubbs7678

    @paulstubbs7678

    23 күн бұрын

    Also they are Rifa caps that have a very bad reputation for splitting open and releasing heaps of smoke and stink, so should be replaced NOW

  • @davidjh7

    @davidjh7

    23 күн бұрын

    I'm glad I checked the comments to see if someone else had already posted this, so I didn't repost it and look stupid. 😁

  • @Vaionko

    @Vaionko

    23 күн бұрын

    And look to be the same paper in epoxy construction as the infamous Rifa capacitors, bound to release their magic smoke after a while of use nowadays.

  • @derekchristenson5711

    @derekchristenson5711

    23 күн бұрын

    @@Vaionko I had a strong "Replace those now!" reaction as soon as I saw them. LOL Messy stinkers! (Thankfully, they are easily replaced these days, so no biggie.)

  • @AlexanderBurgers

    @AlexanderBurgers

    23 күн бұрын

    Someone must've thought they had a great idea to reduce BOM count. Guess they didn't really catch on though.

  • @rmpratt11
    @rmpratt1123 күн бұрын

    Green can be used for certain types of monochromatic photo paper. One of the dark rooms I worked in used green safe light light since the eye is more sensitive to that wavelength over red.

  • @happysprollie

    @happysprollie

    23 күн бұрын

    Green safelights can also be used with most types of colour paper. When I did my degree, the college colour printing darkrooms were fitted with green safelights, although so dim as to be not especially useful. I preferred working in total darkness. The brightness of that display might be a problem if the device isn't carefully positioned. Also, the ease with which the filter comes off suggests to me that the device might have had optional red filters too.

  • @paulstubbs7678

    @paulstubbs7678

    23 күн бұрын

    Maybe that's why it was so easy to remove the display filter, maybe it also come with a red one when new. Left to the user to fit the right one for their photo lab.

  • @thomaswilliams2273

    @thomaswilliams2273

    22 күн бұрын

    I believe that infrared film used a green safelight.

  • @eric_has_no_idea

    @eric_has_no_idea

    20 күн бұрын

    Yep, we used green in one dark room I used dark for IR film and red-laser film (holography).

  • @greatPretender79
    @greatPretender7920 күн бұрын

    As an old radio nut, I once saw an ad that read, "don't be vague, buy Sprague!" Hope this helps.

  • @MeanderBot
    @MeanderBot23 күн бұрын

    "This is a darkroom timer" Anybody else suddenly smell fixer? Just me?

  • @clc2328

    @clc2328

    23 күн бұрын

    well now that you brought it up....sour right? It's only been 40 years

  • @Ni5ei

    @Ni5ei

    23 күн бұрын

    I used to taste it after spending hours inthere.

  • @shawnerz98

    @shawnerz98

    21 күн бұрын

    Now that you mention it...yeah, 40 years for me too.

  • @RolandOuellette

    @RolandOuellette

    7 күн бұрын

    Sodium meta bisulfite. It’s the same stuff as IronOut. It’s also used as a bleaching agent, often in paper manufacturing (given that chlorine will make dioxins doing the same thing and peroxide probably costs more).

  • @OrigamiMarie
    @OrigamiMarie23 күн бұрын

    I still think they're cute. And I like the little x for a decimal point, it seems like an interesting solution that you might get used to, with usage.

  • @BokBarber

    @BokBarber

    23 күн бұрын

    I agree, but they were clearly inferior to other displays that were contemporary or shortly to follow, like VFD and Panaplex. I like the idea of sticking them on a clock because they look unique, but if it were 1972 and I was choosing a display for my device? I'd probably use almost any other option.

  • @schnaps1790
    @schnaps179023 күн бұрын

    It's important to always power your enlarger in the Darkroom

  • @smalltime0

    @smalltime0

    23 күн бұрын

    plugging it in first tends to help

  • @MonkeyJedi99

    @MonkeyJedi99

    23 күн бұрын

    @@smalltime0 But first ensure that the receptacle is clean and ready for completing the circuit.

  • @bewilderbeestie
    @bewilderbeestie23 күн бұрын

    Now I want to build some modern numitrons from those LED filaments you get in light bulbs. I like projects with such a low quality bar.

  • @kilrahvp

    @kilrahvp

    23 күн бұрын

    Yup, can buy some loose ones cheap too

  • @NaoPb

    @NaoPb

    22 күн бұрын

    That sounds like a great project. Good luck with that.

  • @eDoc2020

    @eDoc2020

    18 күн бұрын

    mikeselectricstuff already did this.

  • @Minty1337
    @Minty133723 күн бұрын

    personally I think the 8s look fine and the decimal makes sense in my head, works fine, maybe I'm just used to ugly fonts and weird displays. the glare on the filter bugs me a bit but I can get over it.

  • @ELHV
    @ELHV23 күн бұрын

    Those capacitors with integrated resistors are snubbers for the (probably) Triacs. Without snubbers, certain loads can cause the Triacs to trigger (turn on) by themselves. They also look like they may be the type of capacitor that likes to soak up moisture over years of sitting on a shelf, ready to let the smoke out once they're put back into service.

  • @natejgee

    @natejgee

    23 күн бұрын

    They look like the forever accursed Rifa caps to me and could blow if a fly farts near them.

  • @andygozzo72

    @andygozzo72

    23 күн бұрын

    @@natejgee yep, look like them to me, they ought to be replaced with poly dielectric types, RIFA used and still uses paper dielectric in them!

  • @pr0crastinatr

    @pr0crastinatr

    23 күн бұрын

    When I first heard someone talk about Rifa caps, I thought he called them reefer caps. Made sense to me, they're rolled and go up in smoke.

  • @Squonk06

    @Squonk06

    23 күн бұрын

    The one Alec kept pointing to already has a crack. If it hasn't already blown in the past (perhaps explaining the smell he mentioned when opening the device), its demise is imminent.

  • @andygozzo72

    @andygozzo72

    23 күн бұрын

    @@pr0crastinatr 😜

  • @mikeselectricstuff
    @mikeselectricstuff23 күн бұрын

    Outputs will probably be switched by triacs. Big caps are snubbers for noise/spike suppression- internal 100R resistor is to reduce surge current when the switch closes

  • @andymouse

    @andymouse

    19 күн бұрын

    Bet you could find this project if you went through all the magazines we had back in the day! I mean a dark room timer is so 'Hobby' it's untrue. Practical electronics, ETI or everyday electronics....cheers.

  • @willwood3648
    @willwood364823 күн бұрын

    those "Strange components" with 0.22uf cap + 100 ohm resistor is called Snubber Network. its a capacitor in series with resistor, they usually connect to relay contacts or switches to suppress arcing

  • @misterhat5823

    @misterhat5823

    23 күн бұрын

    I've never seen both parts in the same case. Interesting. With triacs a snubber is often needed with inductive loads or they'll fail to turn off. Modern triacs are much better.

  • @propcycle
    @propcycle23 күн бұрын

    Numitrons were commonly used in applications where the display might be exposed to direct sunlight, ensuring readability. Gas pumps and aircraft cockpits. Gilbarco gas pumps used them for about 20 years--they mostly started going away early 00s. Davtron made a clock/timer that was (and often still is) commonly found in just about every well-equipped smaller aircraft and biz jet. It might not actually be a RCA Numitron-brand display in these, though it is the same thing. Ebay always has dozens of them available, along with Numitron temp gauges. Tag Heuer made a sports Chronometer that is basically the exact same box as your darkroom timer, but has 3 or 4 Numitrons and a bright red painted case. I have 3 of them somewhere that I should dig out. Likely the same manufacturer as the darkroom timer. I also have a benchtop counter made by a company called "Holograf" called a "hi-gage display-counter" that has 6 DR2010 Numitrons and 6-position numeric thumbwheels to load a preset (just like your timer), so maybe plug these ideas into your ebay searches, for those on the hunt.

  • @James1095

    @James1095

    19 күн бұрын

    Yes, people forget (or weren't alive to remember) just how dim early LED displays were. There were several competing types, one had very tiny segments made of the LED dies themselves with a plastic "bubble" magnifier over each digit. Even with the magnifier they were tiny. Then there were LED displays with the segments made out of rows of individual LED dies which were looked at directly, those looked nice but due to the number of dies they were both very expensive and used a lot of power. Then there was the modern style of display with one or more dies illuminating a diffuser, those were dim and not usable in sunlight. It's only in the last 20-30 years that blindingly bright, high efficiency LEDs have been a thing.

  • @MrDuncl

    @MrDuncl

    16 күн бұрын

    From my memory Gilbarco replaced the Numitrons with those electromechanical seven segment displays similar to the station clock Alec showed. LCDs in gas pumps are a 21st century thing.

  • @BigJimSportsCamper
    @BigJimSportsCamper23 күн бұрын

    Rifa capacitors have a habit of cracking and then "making poopie in their trousers".

  • @jetsons101
    @jetsons10123 күн бұрын

    That "burn" mark on the silicone cover could be from the assemblers soldering iron....

  • @TastyBusiness
    @TastyBusiness23 күн бұрын

    Ah, the smell of blown Rifa capacitors. Knew exactly what was probably causing that the moment you made mention of it.

  • @catfishtango2
    @catfishtango223 күн бұрын

    It's a series of tubes!

  • @triplebasic
    @triplebasic21 күн бұрын

    I like that both these products looks like they were put together by electricians and not electrical engineers.

  • @Timothycan
    @Timothycan23 күн бұрын

    I was trained in electronics in the late 1970s, and printed circuit boards were designed by sticking tape onto a clear plastic sheet. Then that was used photographically to effectively print a mask onto the plain copper board, which was then etched to replicate the pattern as a printed circuit, as only the unmasked areas were etched away by the acid solution. Even in those days, rudimentary digital design methods were beginning to be developed, so I got to use both the tape method and the C.A.D. (computer-aided design) method. (The burn on your filter cap there would have been caused by a soldering iron when the leads were soldered to the nearby tag.)

  • @johngaltline9933

    @johngaltline9933

    21 күн бұрын

    Hence, Printed Circuit Board, as in a photographic print.

  • @MrDuncl

    @MrDuncl

    16 күн бұрын

    I used both methods. However the Racal Redac CAD system I spent many hours using at work cost more than my house. I don't know the price of the Daisy systems I used in the early 1990s but definitely remember the cup of coffee icon that would appear while it did anything complex.

  • @mlkbob
    @mlkbob23 күн бұрын

    Does the fact that the filter can be easily removed imply you would have a choice of colour for different applications?

  • @lucythebrazen
    @lucythebrazen23 күн бұрын

    There actually is a reason behind the green lights! Some ORWO Film stocks (ORWO DN21 and DP31) for example specify that you should use a dark green filter. I could imagine that the idea behind that is that green gives you better visual resolution than red, which can help with telling if something really is in focus or not

  • @mjdapp

    @mjdapp

    23 күн бұрын

    The fact that the filter was easily removable from the front suggests that it may have been an exchangeable part with red and green filters in the box to suit different film stocks.

  • @James1095

    @James1095

    19 күн бұрын

    @@mjdapp Which is probably precisely why numitrons were chosen as the display device. The white light of the filaments could be filtered to result in either red or green digits. Had they used LEDs this would not have been possible, red and green LEDs both emit their respective colors directly, and one can't be filtered into the other.

  • @TheChipmunk2008
    @TheChipmunk200823 күн бұрын

    BCD thumbwheel switches were a commodity item, made sense to use them to save on interpreting circuitry

  • @MrDuncl

    @MrDuncl

    16 күн бұрын

    Look in somewhere like Digikey and you can still buy them. About $10 each so aimed at professional use. We just put some on some bespoke test equipment.

  • @JustPyroYT
    @JustPyroYT23 күн бұрын

    That timer looks like a nice thing to put in the Background

  • @RisingRevengeance
    @RisingRevengeance23 күн бұрын

    Looks pretty good to me honestly

  • @tubaman66
    @tubaman6623 күн бұрын

    7492 is a divide by 12 counter.

  • @somedude2492
    @somedude249223 күн бұрын

    19:38 pure gold. Delivery was on point. Perfectly describes the happiness of the average electronics enthusiast in the 70s.

  • @arubaguy2733
    @arubaguy273323 күн бұрын

    Another one of many interesting videos, Alex. I love it when you "go retro" and dissect old pinball and juke box guts. Electromechanical telephone line routers are REALLY amazing. I actually repaired photocopy machines in the early 70s that used these filament 7-segment displays. Problem was, when one filament burned out, the whole tube became useless, and they were NOT cheap. Large digit LED displays were still a few years off. Our chunky hand-held calculators had LED digits so tiny that they had magnifying lenses over them. I love seeing this "legacy" electronic stuff. I grew up learning vacuum tube circuitry, and discreet transistors were just coming into vogue. Amazing how yesterday's massive computing machines now fit into a pocket and do 100 times the computing.

  • @gonzo_the_great1675
    @gonzo_the_great167522 күн бұрын

    Early-ish PCB design was done with 'letraset' transfer rub down component footprints. And a roll of track ribbon tape, to make a positive artwork. Then photographically reduced to give a positive print. That was used as a photo mask for UV sensitised resist on the blank PCB. It was common to solder flood the tracks, as there was no solder resist to protect the tracks from tarnishing. Sometimes a silver plating bath was used instead. The through holes were often copper studs that were soldered through.

  • @andymouse

    @andymouse

    19 күн бұрын

    I reckon its early 'Tape' not even letrosett, some freaky curves on there and tape was easier to use, I didn't like the rub down stuff.

  • @sausagedog52
    @sausagedog5223 күн бұрын

    to be fair, everything looked janky back in the 70s

  • @Fightface
    @Fightface23 күн бұрын

    did not deserve the hate :(

  • @raymitchell9736
    @raymitchell973623 күн бұрын

    The weird capacitors with a series resistor is known as an RC snubbers for the AC power on the outlets to control the transient spikes. The 74192 is a BCD counter (up/down), the 74193's are for Hex(binary) 4-bit counters, the larger filter capacitor was singed with a soldering iron when soldering the wires on that terminal post. The thing you called a transistor on the back of the case is likely a power regulator in a TO3 case and they generate a lot of heat. I would guess it is a 7805 *(edited) or LM309K. The board was laid out on plastic (Acetate) and then was photographed as a negative and then the PCB would be dipped in KPR (Kodak Photo Resist) and exposed to UV light. Then the unexposed resist would be washed off and then etched. I could explain this in greater detail because I got my electronics degree in 1987 and they were still using this process at the college... and I had to make similar PCB's! Later on the CAD PCB layout software like PADS, Eagle, and KiCAD are available (affordable) for the home hobbyist but the big boy on the block is Altium... and prepare for sticker shock.

  • @nezbrun872

    @nezbrun872

    23 күн бұрын

    FWIW, LM309K was the rage in TO3 in the 70s for 5V 1A regulators. LM323K for 5V 3A. You can still buy them, $60 a piece!!!

  • @raymitchell9736

    @raymitchell9736

    23 күн бұрын

    @@nezbrun872 Oh right... if you don't work on power supplies, especially linear ones, you forget. As soon as you said LM309K BINGO! I recall that now. So I think I have some LM309K's in my regulator junk box along with a lot of 78xx and 79xx regulators... Really? Those old parts are $60 bucks a pop? WOW! I could be sitting on a fortune! (Or not, I'm pretty sure I don't have a lot of them)

  • @ingehansen9069

    @ingehansen9069

    23 күн бұрын

    One main point is that the 74192 counters are loadable. So the value set by the thumbwheels are loaded into the counters and as long as there is no counting the value is fed directly to the numitron drivers. When counting is activated the load is inhibited and the numitrons display the count down value. The flip-flop is used to stop the count when zero is reached (and also to start the count) by using the flip-flop set/clear inputs .

  • @raymitchell9736

    @raymitchell9736

    23 күн бұрын

    @@ingehansen9069 Yes, that's correct. And just thinking about what I've seen in the video, I think I could design and build a similar unit with stuff that I already have in stock. I've got some 7447 7-segment display drivers for LEDs. Not that I need to, but just imagining I could. BTW: Did you ever get Forrest Mims, III Engineer's notebook at Radio Shack and see all those nifty projects? I build several of them. So there's one project in there that uses a CMOS chip that has 3 decade counters and it multiplexed 3 output (BCD) so then you needed a decoder chip, but it could replace a lot of that TTL logic. In his design you can cascade them so there was a 6 digit display, and with a timebase of 1 second and a gate you could make a frequency counter. I'm going back at least 40 years, or more... Fun Times!

  • @SianaGearz

    @SianaGearz

    23 күн бұрын

    Altium is for hobbyist as well with freeware CircuitMaker, and small business with CircuitStudio. But i don't see myself giving up on Kicad, it's gotten sort of... shockingly nice i would say? Though my frame of reference is Eagle 7, may it burn in hell.

  • @JDoawp
    @JDoawp23 күн бұрын

    That burnt part is probably from them touching a solder pen to that solder point right next to the big cell :)

  • @teardowndan5364

    @teardowndan5364

    23 күн бұрын

    Yup. If you solder right-handed, that would be pretty much exactly where the soldering tip would be for that joint.

  • @phrebh
    @phrebh23 күн бұрын

    I like the 6 with the extra bar and the 9 without. And now I can never look at any seven segment displays ever again.

  • @gcewing

    @gcewing

    23 күн бұрын

    If I remember rightly, the 9 without the bar is what you get from the commonly-used 7447 BCD-to-7-segment decoder chip. Some people used hacks to add the extra bar to it. This device seems to be using a different decoder-driver chip that I can't find on the internet.

  • @SianaGearz

    @SianaGearz

    23 күн бұрын

    @@gcewing 74928. Datasheet for the original part is hard to come by, but MM74C928 should be close enough to make sense of the circuit.

  • @0Rookie0

    @0Rookie0

    23 күн бұрын

    Agreed. It's settled, the 6 with and 9 without are defacto the best way to do it. I wonder if some of it stems from handwriting. I'm not sure I've seen contemporary handwriting do the 9 with the tail. Only angled.

  • @martj.1350

    @martj.1350

    23 күн бұрын

    @@0Rookie0from my perspective as a European, basically everybody will do the tail on the numbers six AND nine in handwriting. Could the timer have been made for the European market?

  • @coreycampbell1689

    @coreycampbell1689

    22 күн бұрын

    Yeah the 7447 & 4511 didn’t have the bars but the neon DM8880 drivers did. Haha now that I program the microcontroller segment tables myself I could do the 6 and 9 differently. But I have preferred them without the bars.

  • @NullReference119
    @NullReference11923 күн бұрын

    That board is a very interesting historical piece. It has a combination of point to point and PCB elements all on a hand laid board. That big cap is quite likely dead. I'd be careful about using that without checking the caps for leakage, it can quite easily destroy the most expensive part in there: the transformer. In fact that transformer already looks like it's been quite hot. The resistors are carbon comp and thus have probably also drifted (carbon comp usually fails with higher not lower values). The silver cans are likely germanium transistors, but could also be diodes. Edit: nevermind there is a full wave bridge rectifier in blue diodes in the back. Doh!

  • @musiqtee
    @musiqtee23 күн бұрын

    “Green filter…?” was my first thought… But I’m 58, and did stills and super-8 as an expensive hobby before the world hit the 80’s. Silly me… 😂

  • @maoschanz4665
    @maoschanz466523 күн бұрын

    my guess: the filter is green intentionally, so the red lights in an actual darkroom would not create the glare

  • @maoschanz4665

    @maoschanz4665

    23 күн бұрын

    hypothesis number 2: they put a grey background to lower the contrast, not of the display, but of the glare coming from the tube

  • @teardowndan5364
    @teardowndan536423 күн бұрын

    The first PCB I have ever made was using an etch-resist pen to draw the traces before etching the rest. Another similar method which achieves more consistent trace width is taping the board, which allows you to put down longer perfectly straight and more tightly packed lines than what can be reliably drawn by hand.

  • @bewilderbeestie
    @bewilderbeestie23 күн бұрын

    I made DIY PCBs in the 1980s at school; we would draw onto the unetched PCBs with marker pens, with rub-on transfers for component footprints, holes etc. Then you'd expose with UV, etch in a tank of some vile orange stuff, drill all the holes with a mini drill press, and you were done. It was actually very easy and effective. You could even do double-sided boards. Our teacher would always get us to minimise the amount of exposed copper which needed to be etched away as that used up the vile orange fluid, so we'd usually end up doing big ground fills by colouring them in with the marker pens or with masking tape or the like. I don't know if this board was home made. It could have been. There's no writing or silkscreen, there's no soldermask (whoever made it even forgot to tin some tracks), and some of the tracks are noticeably different in thickness from the others. OTOH if it was home made it was done very carefully. I'd expect hand-drawn curved tracks to be much wobblier than that. Also the corners are very nicely rounded.

  • @Ozbert

    @Ozbert

    23 күн бұрын

    In the late 1970's, we were using different width black tape to create the tracks, and this allowed you to make quite smooth curves etc. You would use the wider tape for the power/higher current routes, and/or you could over-solder the tracks to increase the CSA, hence load capacity. The rest was done as you say above.

  • @PurpleAlienPlanet

    @PurpleAlienPlanet

    23 күн бұрын

    "some vile orange stuff" --> ferric chloride

  • @gcewing

    @gcewing

    23 күн бұрын

    There's a fairly professional-looking logo on the front, so I don't think it's a DIY project. It was probably made by a small company that didn't make very many of them and did a lot of the design and assembly using manual methods.

  • @JimmerofOz

    @JimmerofOz

    23 күн бұрын

    I did something similar, built a phone line noise filter out of discreet components, designed my board, markered it, UV then disolved the excess copper in a warm bromide? solution.. drill press for the component and wiring holes, soldered it all up and mounted it in a kit box from Tandy.

  • @MrDuncl

    @MrDuncl

    16 күн бұрын

    @@PurpleAlienPlanet I recall a kid in the electronics club at school (in the 1970s) saying "You know Stainless Steel is supposed to be stainless - it isn't). He had tipped used ferric chloride down his Mums sink.

  • @TheVgonman
    @TheVgonman23 күн бұрын

    "Delightfully Crude..." That's one way to put it.😂

  • @pomonabill220
    @pomonabill22023 күн бұрын

    The traces on the top of the board end in plate through holes, and big blobs of solder were use to make the connection from the top to the bottom. The "switches" used for the outlet are triacs and the cap/resistors are snubber devices to reduce any switching spikes from the triacs. The decade counters were in parallel load mode from the thumbwheel switches until you started the counter. Very simple logic compared to today's technology, but real interesting to see and brought back many memories for me! Thanks for posting!

  • @GodmanchesterGoblin

    @GodmanchesterGoblin

    23 күн бұрын

    Yes, the holes are either pinned or have a short wire passed through before soldering - effectively a poor man's plated through hole.

  • @Brian_Of_Melbourne

    @Brian_Of_Melbourne

    22 күн бұрын

    @@GodmanchesterGoblin Indeed, those holes are NOT plated through. That's why there is a big solder blob. There may be an eyelet or a short post in the hole that is then soldered on both sides to complete the circuit.

  • @GodmanchesterGoblin

    @GodmanchesterGoblin

    22 күн бұрын

    @@Brian_Of_Melbourne Yes - and they can have a different coefficient of expansion with temperature compared to the pcb material, potentially resulting in hard to see cracks in the traces. Been there, repaired that, etc, back in the late 70s.

  • @silmarian
    @silmarian23 күн бұрын

    I think that darkroom timer is still far more modern than the ones I had back in school.

  • @Hirnspatz

    @Hirnspatz

    23 күн бұрын

    And what was that? I suppose a wind up kitchen timer and a couple of wires?

  • @silmarian

    @silmarian

    23 күн бұрын

    @@Hirnspatz basically, only it was about 8” tall. It plugged into the wall, you plugged the enlarger into it and then turned the dial to how long you wanted it to be on for. I’m pretty sure timer worked like an electric clock (not quartz but the constant motor speed type) and wasn’t spring powered the way a kitchen timer is, though. It survived decades of middle school students of varying ability and enthusiasm.

  • @dXXPacmanXXb
    @dXXPacmanXXb23 күн бұрын

    i think they look cool af

  • @misterhat5823

    @misterhat5823

    23 күн бұрын

    I agree. Not a thing wrong with them.

  • @steven-george
    @steven-george23 күн бұрын

    The Items on the back panel next to the Triacs are called 'Snubber networks' they help manage switching noise and over voltage conditions. This helps protect the Triacs, and prevent them from latching on due to spurios noise.

  • @Dormanil
    @Dormanil23 күн бұрын

    AP clearly stands for Actual Product.

  • @perbilse573
    @perbilse57323 күн бұрын

    Really puts the moon landings into perspective. I bet that power transistor on the back is a 2N3055, they were ubiquitous. The two pins poking through the holes reminds me of an amplifier I built in my teens in the early 70s; the "chassis" was sheet aluminium bent into an upside-down U shape, and the PSU was built around a zener and a 2N3055.

  • @johngaltline9933

    @johngaltline9933

    21 күн бұрын

    My first thought was a 7805, but given the date codes on the other parts this thing looks to be about a year too old for that, so yeah, more likely a 2N3055, those things were everywhere back in the day. Still have boxes full of them which are worth a small fortune today.

  • @MrDuncl

    @MrDuncl

    16 күн бұрын

    Bearing in mind that they had to integrate and test all the equipment in advance this is about a decade after the Apollo equipment was designed. having said that NASA had larger budgets than a small company making photography equipment.

  • @spedi6721
    @spedi672123 күн бұрын

    I was today years old when I learned that you have a side channel. That'll be some sleepless nights to catch up.

  • @davidjade4764
    @davidjade476423 күн бұрын

    I had an internship where I did printed circuit board (PCB) development using UV light. It's pretty fascinating. You start with a design on a transparency, and tape it down to this sandwich of UV-sensitive material / copper / plastic / copper / UV-sensitive material. After exposing it to the UV light, you'd put it in a solution that would remove the exposed bits. Then you used etching fluid to remove the copper in those spots. Then you used a solvent to remove the remaining UV-sensitive material leaving the copper traces underneath. Then you'd soak it in a tinning solution so the copper wouldn't oxidize. Then drill holes in the board as appropriate and solder your components in. I think you'd appreciate it given your fondness for photographic development.

  • @gcewing
    @gcewing23 күн бұрын

    The 7492 is a 4-bit counter with two sections, a divide-by-2 and a divide-by-6. That's probably what they're using to get the 10Hz. You're probably right about the BCD encoders. Thumbwheels like that with BCD outputs are fairly common (or at least they used to be -- nobody wants to use physical controls any more!)

  • @robertvaldimarsson2109
    @robertvaldimarsson210922 күн бұрын

    The components with a capacitance and resistance marked are probably "snubbers" for the triacs.

  • @mytube001
    @mytube00123 күн бұрын

    Our eyes have their greatest sensitivity around 550 nm, which is green. For color photography dark rooms, you can use very, very dim green lights. They light up the room just enough so you can see outlines, paper boxes, the easel and so on, once your eyes were reasonably dark adapted. But not bright enough to haze color paper in the maybe few tens of seconds they were out. That's what we used back in my day (90s). The total light output of those Numitrons is likely very low, so at a bit of distance, they will appear as a very diffuse, very dim green, just like those green lamps we used in the darkroom.

  • @kenmore01
    @kenmore0123 күн бұрын

    Yep, that's about how I would have made it back then lol. Fun fact: those boards were designed using transparency and vinyl tape at 2 or 4 X then photographically reduced so you could do it with better resolution. I remember having layouts covering the entire kitchen table. When you brought them in to be reduced, you unrolled it then pressed the tape back down where it came up when rolling it up for transport lol! 😄

  • @peterlekkerkerker4482
    @peterlekkerkerker448223 күн бұрын

    7492 seems to be divide by 12. sn74ls92 is, which is most likely a modern variant of the same logic. After rectifying ac 60hz with a bridge rectifier you get a 120hz which might be used here.

  • @johngaltline9933

    @johngaltline9933

    21 күн бұрын

    The SN means it's manufactured by Texas Instruments. LS stands for Low-power Schottky, which use less power and run faster than their original 1970's 74## counterparts. Functionally for most applications, LS, S, and standard TTL ICs are interchangeable.

  • @schmitzbeats6102
    @schmitzbeats610223 күн бұрын

    The board looks like it has been "taped". You would use a mylar (or semi transparent paper) sheet and traces were done with sized rolls of black masking tape which you can stick onto that. Patterns for sockets could be done with dry transfer "rub on" symbols (similar to "lettraset"). Sometimes this was combined with black pens, similar to sharpies. This artwork then is used to photo expose the PCB.

  • @sgctactics
    @sgctactics21 күн бұрын

    Those things on the back panel are called snubbers, or spark killers on Japanese schematics, Rifa brand to be precise. They're an old school way of preventing surge spikes and other transient voltages, built into a conveniently unreliable paper capacitor! Also, Sprague is technically pronounced "sprog", and they're known for their capacitors back in the day, I don't recall many ICs from them. I wouldn't be surprised if that's a DIP packaged capacitor array. I see many of those kinds of components on the punch presses, spot welders and many other old machines when troubleshooting circuits at work, many from that era. Talk about a hassle finding replacement components...

  • @MrDuncl

    @MrDuncl

    16 күн бұрын

    From Wikipedia "By 1966 Sprague opened a brand new facility in Worcester, MA dedicated to semiconductor and integrated circuit fabrication. The new factory was headed by Dr. John L. Sprague, the youngest son of Robert C. Sprague. John Sprague was a graduate of Stanford University, and specialized in semiconductor development. However Sprague's plans for Micro Tech never blossomed, and they wound up making capacitors.[11] Robert C. Sprague's heavy investment in the semiconductor business reduced income for the company". Don't forget that Fairchild started out as a camera company, Texas Instruments as an oil surveyor, while Micron was funded by a potato farmer (chips of a different kind).

  • @n1gak
    @n1gak23 күн бұрын

    I'm guessing the entire reason the filter is replacable -- when it sold, it came with optional filters, including paper-safe.

  • @robsquared2
    @robsquared223 күн бұрын

    "So you thought I was too mean to the numitron?" *pulls out gallagher sledgehammer*

  • @HennerZeller
    @HennerZeller23 күн бұрын

    24:45 You essentially had thin black tape that you can put on transparent sheets to transfer it to a PCB with positive photo-resist. It was easier to lay curves than square connections (and you also wanted to avoid to steep angles anyway to prevent bubbles of air or etchant to collect there).

  • @gcewing

    @gcewing

    23 күн бұрын

    And for double sided boards you could use red and blue tapes on the one sheet, and expose it through filters to get the masks.

  • @bj_
    @bj_21 күн бұрын

    A dark room display might be the only use case those would work for. It's probably not bright enough to expose nearby film, and green filter I think was specifically chosen to reduce glare from amber lights in the dark room

  • @SojournerDidimus
    @SojournerDidimus7 күн бұрын

    I like that "halo" effect, it makes the segments look thicker than they actually are.

  • @agw5425
    @agw542523 күн бұрын

    you draw with a special marker on a copper covered Fiberglas board (aka a blank circuit board) and then "develop" it in a acid bath that eats away all copper you did not draw on, if left in to long it will eat away the drawn lines to so timing is important. I made a lab power supply for my introduction to electronics course in college in 1995 using this method. Perfect for a one off diy build.

  • @TheRogueWolf

    @TheRogueWolf

    23 күн бұрын

    So did they need a timer to build the timer?

  • @richarddickjohnson516

    @richarddickjohnson516

    23 күн бұрын

    ​@@TheRogueWolfyes

  • @0Rookie0

    @0Rookie0

    23 күн бұрын

    @@TheRogueWolf One mississippi, two mississippi... oh dang nabbit...

  • @Brian_Of_Melbourne

    @Brian_Of_Melbourne

    22 күн бұрын

    That's a home technique, this is commercial and is as others others have said hand laid out and then photographed (perhaps with reduction) to make the final transparency (maybe even a negative) to expose the PCBs with.

  • @agw5425

    @agw5425

    22 күн бұрын

    @@Brian_Of_Melbourne That board did not look professionally made. It is a teaching method as well as a "DIY" and small scale method, the photo/transparency method is more involved and not suitable for small scale DIY. As I said, it was used in a US college course as a teaching method/aid.

  • @mikeselectricstuff
    @mikeselectricstuff23 күн бұрын

    Glare wouldn't be an issue in a darkroom though...

  • @iNerdier

    @iNerdier

    23 күн бұрын

    My thoughts exactly

  • @christianseibold3369

    @christianseibold3369

    23 күн бұрын

    Well, you didn't pay attention then. The glare isn't just coming from the room, there is also a glare from the numitrons themselves being next to each other. Additionally, It would be an issue in every other device that these numitrons are in, which is literally the point, lmao. These weren't *only* used in darkroom devices.

  • @SafeRemain

    @SafeRemain

    23 күн бұрын

    @@christianseibold3369 nuance we needed

  • @johngaltline9933

    @johngaltline9933

    21 күн бұрын

    @@christianseibold3369 can we copy and paste your reply here to the dozens of other similar comments about "BuT tHeRe IsN't AnY gLaRe In A dArK rOoM!"

  • @Amicus-Goku-89
    @Amicus-Goku-8923 күн бұрын

    The two silver components that are rectangular on the back panel are film capacitors probably for power safety, REFA branded ones tend to crack with age and will blow magic smoke when they go.

  • @ChristopherHailey
    @ChristopherHailey21 күн бұрын

    This is one of the best examples of tech archeology I've ever seen...I loved every second of it.

  • @jessstrap2088
    @jessstrap208823 күн бұрын

    This feels like it's asking for a big clive collab.

  • @acidtreat101

    @acidtreat101

    22 күн бұрын

    Please send it to Big Clive!!! Heck ill pay the shipping!

  • @ironwheal
    @ironwheal23 күн бұрын

    I don't understand the purpose of the rants, the display looks and works perfectly fine. in real life you'd get used to it in an hour and never think about it again. you'd be too busy working the device to do the actual job, not contemplate the shapes or decimal point :-)

  • @tommylee4350
    @tommylee435023 күн бұрын

    The commentary on this video is delivered in the style of me after getting home from the pub. I'm not sure what it is but it has that vibe.

  • @whoever6458
    @whoever64585 күн бұрын

    That's how we used to solder and it was even a technique before my time but it's what you did if you didn't have much money but wanted to make something. I did some similar stuff when I was a kid in the 80s and then I decided that you could make cool jewelry out of solder too so I did that for a while. Then I studied other things and, the next time I needed a soldering gun, I found that my brother has lost all the tips I had for mine. Great video!

  • @aromaticsnail
    @aromaticsnail23 күн бұрын

    at this point this is just a pet peeve....this darkroom timer looks even better than the clock.

  • @christianseibold3369

    @christianseibold3369

    23 күн бұрын

    Cannot agree at all. It looks terrible.

  • @The_Nametag
    @The_Nametag23 күн бұрын

    The filter isn't red because the light in the dark room would be red, and you wouldn't be able to see the segments at all under that kind of filter.

  • @Hamring

    @Hamring

    23 күн бұрын

    Are you sure about this? Every darkroom timer i've used has had red numbers. Well, except a fully mechanical timer which was not illuminated at all. Not trying to be a smartass here btw you might be right. The ones i mean all used LEDs

  • @bobpockney

    @bobpockney

    23 күн бұрын

    ​@Hamring Agreed. Red display is fine.

  • @bosstowndynamics5488

    @bosstowndynamics5488

    23 күн бұрын

    That would only apply if they were passive segments under a red blocking filter, actively illuminated displays using the same colour are still going to be easily distinguished from black under monochromatic light

  • @iNerdier

    @iNerdier

    23 күн бұрын

    It’s more likely because it’s for colour paper, rather than monochrome. Colour usually has a sensitivity dip in the green which this should be close to.

  • @The_Nametag

    @The_Nametag

    23 күн бұрын

    It is possible I am assuming incorrectly. However, I think it would be worth examining this under the proper conditions of a dark room to truly see. And finding some red film shouldn't be difficult. Bonus if finding a variety to test with.

  • @perrybrown4985
    @perrybrown49859 күн бұрын

    In 1975, being a little 15yo electronics enthusiast/eunterpr who was also interested in photography... This looks exactly like what I wanted to build (and the state of my construction skills). I was peddling an idea for such a thing to the various camera stores. I could see a need in the market, but at 15 was totally naive regarding the problems bringing products to market. The owners of the photographic stores were kind, but distanced themselves from my youthful enthusiasm. I have no doubt that the project would have eneded in disappointment for all concerned, so they did me a great favour. BTW, I was going to use nixies. (and I also went on to a carreer in electronic design/engineering, producing many successful products 🙂).

  • @mackpines
    @mackpines23 күн бұрын

    Thanks so much for showing off this fascinating equipment. Never knew about this before.

  • @alvaros.
    @alvaros.23 күн бұрын

    Years ago, you could buy circuit boards with the back completely covered with copper. You used a marker to draw all the tracks and connection pads over the copper, then you submerged the board in acid. The acid removed all the copper, except in the zones protected by the marker, living only the tracks. Then you used a drill to make the holes in the connection pads. That circuit board seemed to have been made following this procedure.

  • @lasskinn474

    @lasskinn474

    23 күн бұрын

    people used to make the masks by hand. not by hand for every board though, but using photo techniques. you can still buy raw boards to make your own pcb's tho of course. techniques differ, but back in university we'd use a laminating machine to transfer a laser print from paper onto the board.

  • @schmitzbeats6102
    @schmitzbeats610223 күн бұрын

    These are safety capacitors, they're "self healing" and do not fail short, which they have to because these will have the full mains voltage over them. (X-Class in modern nomenclature) With the built in series resistor is a snubber also called a boucherot or zobel network. The are to absorb spikes from inductive loads I would guess.

  • @DIY-valvular
    @DIY-valvular23 күн бұрын

    Hi! The burned spot on the main electrolytic capacitor isn't harmful, it was just not too carefully assembled. The pcb style is typical for the time (prior cad), but it was not made with the best of the designer skills. One point of concern is that pair of Rifa capacitors glued on the back plate. One of them is visibly cracked ( a typical mode of failure of this brand). This causes the moisture of the air enter into the capacitor and it leaks. They should be replaced by safety reasons. 🤗🇦🇷

  • @tookitogo

    @tookitogo

    23 күн бұрын

    I’ve seen tons of Rifa caps whose epoxy has cracked - on completely unused parts. They don’t even need to be ever connected to electricity to fail…

  • @DIY-valvular

    @DIY-valvular

    23 күн бұрын

    @tookitogo Those caps (and other German brands of that time) were excellent , better than today's Chinese ones, but suffer the pass of time because the encapsulation technique. Too bad. 🤗🇦🇷

  • @tookitogo

    @tookitogo

    20 күн бұрын

    @@DIY-valvular RIFA was Swedish, not German. Belongs to KEMET now, who still sells them.

  • @DIY-valvular

    @DIY-valvular

    20 күн бұрын

    @@tookitogo My bad! 🤗

  • @Blenster
    @Blenster21 күн бұрын

    Beautiful curved traces! I'm so glad I can do them in KiCAD now.

  • @smashallpots1428
    @smashallpots142823 күн бұрын

    so my main clock is a segment clock and i honestly couldnt remember if the 6 and 9s had the tops and bottoms had to check and when you mentioned it and i realized i didnt know was just after the clock went from 16 to 17so thankfully i didnt have to wait long for 19

  • @gcewing

    @gcewing

    23 күн бұрын

    Well, don't leave us in suspense -- which was it? :-)

  • @smashallpots1428

    @smashallpots1428

    23 күн бұрын

    @@gcewing it does have tops and bottoms

  • @strandwolf796
    @strandwolf79623 күн бұрын

    0:51 surely they arent THAT dim right? ... ok makes sense lol

  • @wheelmanv
    @wheelmanv17 күн бұрын

    I do like the understanding that in a dark room, glare is not an issue

  • @dhpbear2
    @dhpbear222 күн бұрын

    17:13 and they were thoughtful enough to place a *pin* BETWEEN the digits, dashing any hopes :)

  • @m4rgin4l
    @m4rgin4l23 күн бұрын

    You're clearly in the pocket of big Nixie :)

  • @misterhat5823

    @misterhat5823

    23 күн бұрын

    Both are cool.

  • @thenorup
    @thenorup23 күн бұрын

    Oh no, glare from the bright room lights in my darkroom! Wait a minute...

  • @christianseibold3369

    @christianseibold3369

    23 күн бұрын

    There is also glare happening from the numitrons being next to each other. *And* these weren't just used in darkroom devices. Pay better attention.

  • @AsahelFrost
    @AsahelFrost22 күн бұрын

    Full wave rectified US mains pulses at 120Hz, so the 7492 divide by 12 will give you the 0.1 second clock.

  • @Renville80
    @Renville8013 күн бұрын

    General Electric used these in two different electric meter registers - the T-76 and TM-76. These are a sight to behold - it has a lone Numitron display in one corner to sequentially flash the date and time (when prompted by passing a magnet over a reed switch along the edge). The rest of the register front is taken up by the programming port, battery holder, and 13 register dials (5 for kWh, 4 for time-of-use rate A, and 4 for rate B). These registers are rare today... many were scrapped after the Numitron display burned out, and most of the rest were obsoleted when the TM-8x series of registers were introduced (which replaced the multiple dials and the Numitron with a vacuum fluorescent display).

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