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Flipcommons AI Descriptions (DisplaySubtype) and Flipcommons Catalog contributed to this record.

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description
Flipcommons AI Descriptions (DisplaySubtype) Nixie tubes were cold-cathode gas-discharge devices, each containing a stack of ten wire-mesh numerals — zero through nine — sealed inside a glass envelope filled with neon gas. When voltage was applied to a particular cathode, the corresponding numeral glowed orange behind the glass. They were never common in pinball; only a handful of machines in the late 1960s and early 1970s used them for electronic scoring before LED [[display-subtype:id:2]] displays made them obsolete. Games like [[manufacturer:id:86]]'s *Odds & Evens* (1973) and several European manufacturers experimented with nixie-tube scoring as a bridge between the purely mechanical scoring of the pre-electronic era and the LED displays that would arrive with the first [[technology-generation:id:3]] machines. The tubes were expensive, fragile, and required high-voltage drive circuits — impractical for the rough environment of an arcade. Their warm orange glow and the visible depth of stacked numerals give them a distinctive aesthetic that no other display technology replicates. Nixie-tube pinball machines are extremely rare today, and working examples command a premium among collectors who value the technology's visual character and its place as the earliest form of electronic scoring in the medium. used
display_type
Flipcommons Catalog alphanumeric used
display_order
Flipcommons Catalog 1 used
name
Flipcommons Catalog Nixie Tube used
slug
Flipcommons Catalog nixie-tube used