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Other Vintage Household Electrical or Electromechanical Items For discussions about other vintage (over 25 years old) electrical and electromechanical household items. See the sticky thread for details. |
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16th Nov 2017, 4:18 am | #1 |
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EEC Nixie Clock mystery.
I came across a Nixie clock made by European Electronic Counting. Apparently they were a UK company ? Clearly they had contracted or used an American made LSI IC (possibly be made by AMI), it is a unique looking ceramic IC.
So far this is the only example of this clock I have seen. The IC remains unidentified (I've checked it against a number of LSI clock IC's of the early 70's era, nothing matches), but also I cannot find any information on the company EEC. Here is the clock & article: http://worldphaco.com/uploads/THE_19...S_LSI_CHIP.pdf Has anyone ever heard of EEC ? or can recognize the IC type ? |
16th Nov 2017, 5:34 am | #2 |
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Re: EEC Nixie Clock mystery.
Never heard of them.
The style of the IC package makes me think of Mostek. But that ceramic package could well have been a commodity. David
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16th Nov 2017, 2:11 pm | #3 |
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Re: EEC Nixie Clock mystery.
Not heard of them either.
The Russian resistors were quite popular in in the U.K. in the late 60's & early 70's. They were of fairly good quality & good stability compared to some of the easily obtainable U.K. types, but more to the point, were cheap. Looks like cost was a factor. I still have a large development box of them! The IC package is very interesting. Being ceramic, it could possibly been a MIL spec type. No markings anywhere I presume. |
16th Nov 2017, 3:37 pm | #4 |
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Re: EEC Nixie Clock mystery.
Huw,
There's a forum for Hewlett Packard collectors. On it, there's a thread discussing Nixie Clocks and sixth post down , a forum member called Paul Berger (Canada) discusses building a clock with an LSI chip, 40 years previously, and also, more excitingly, 'recently'. This was in 2016. It may be a long shot, but if you can access the forum in some way and then contact this constructor, you may find illumination...
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16th Nov 2017, 8:17 pm | #5 |
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Re: EEC Nixie Clock mystery.
In the early 1970's it was possible to get ICs of your own design manufactured in the UK by companies such as Plessey and General Instrument that offered foundry services. Plessey used to manufacture large quantities of custom ICs for a French TV manufacturer without knowing what functions they performed: untested packaged ICs were shipped out for the customer to do their own testing and/or labeling. You will find it virtually impossible to find data on such custom devices if the company who had them made is no loner in existence. The chips we designed were made by Plessey using military-grade ceramic flatpack packages imported from the USA.
If our experience at the time is anything to go by, we found that the lid of some types of ceramic package could be removed by applying a sharp tap with a Philips screwdriver. This would break the seal with the ceramic frame without damaging the chip or wiring, allowing the chip (and any manufacturer's codes it might bear) to be seen with an inspection microscope. I haven't come across that particular type of package, but I don't suppose you would like to do that. ICs were less complex then and you didn't need a computer work station: graph paper, pencils & a ruler were sufficient. |
16th Nov 2017, 10:15 pm | #6 |
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Re: EEC Nixie Clock mystery.
There was another Digeec clock on the forum in the past, but I don't think this type used an LSI IC, I'm pretty sure it was just 74 TTL's, but again an impressive clock:
https://www.vintage-radio.net/forum/...ec+Nixie+Clock. I think I once saw an advertisement in a vintage UK magazine by the EEC company, but I cannot recall which mag or when, but it was from the 1970's. I found some similar LSI IC's, not in ceramic packages though, with differences in the pin configurations and complimented BCD outputs. It was quite a job to copy out the schematic of my clock, if I hadn't I wouldn't have been able to figure out how to get it to run on 50Hz mains. |
16th Nov 2017, 11:06 pm | #7 | |
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Re: EEC Nixie Clock mystery.
Quote:
I'm a bit suspicious of metal top ceramic IC's. They look beautiful enough, but I think some may possibly get the same type of tin whisker problem seen in AF11x transistors, that is if the tops are tin plated. For example I had a batch of other ceramic metal top digital logic IC's, never used and very well packed/stored, in theory they should have worked but two out of about 12 were stone dead. I seldom see this with batches of NOS plastic or ceramic case 74 series logic IC's without the metal tops. Only perhaps one dud in many hundreds if that. I really should crack the tops off the dead ones and look with the microscope to see if I can identify why they failed. |
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16th Nov 2017, 11:10 pm | #8 |
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Re: EEC Nixie Clock mystery.
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17th Nov 2017, 11:00 am | #9 |
Pentode
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Re: EEC Nixie Clock mystery.
It seems odd that anyone would fabricate a clock chip at a time when such a chip had become available to the market from AMI and Motorola. Perhaps this IC was an early development chip that just missed the boat?
Searching European Electronic Counting Ltd under Google books produces a result for the magazine Electronic Components- Volume 14, Issues 1-12 Page 360 Eddie |
26th Feb 2018, 8:46 am | #10 |
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Re: EEC Nixie Clock mystery.
I run the NEONIXIE-L Google Group - we've been doing nixie and related stuff since 2002, originally on Yahoo and since 2010, on Google - just under 1,000 members.
So, I did a bit of research. European Electronic Counting definitely had custom chips made for them by Emihus Microcomponents Limited (also known as "EML"), a UK company based in Weybridge, Surrey with a manufacturing plant in Glenrothes, Scotland. Emihus, was an LSI manufacturer specialising in calculator chips, jointly owned by EMI (Electrical and Musical Industries, 49%) and Hughes Aircraft (51%)... I've found references to the EML HEEC2, also known as the EDC 6051 and EDC 6052 (depending on options) - these are timer/counter LSI devices. There's an article in ETI, page 62, http://www.americanradiohistory.com/...ay-1975-08.pdf however, the clock is from 1972, so it may be an earlier chip. Emihus tended to prefix their part numbers with "H" and I would assume that the initials "EEC" in the part code are not coincidental... There's quite a lot in the trade press about EML around that time frame (1968-75). Therefore thinking that this is where the device came from. Now to identify it!
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26th Feb 2018, 1:05 pm | #11 |
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Re: EEC Nixie Clock mystery.
Hi Nick,
Thank you for the interesting reply. I had no idea that chips like this were being made in the UK at the time or about Emihus. I had guessed it was probably made by one of the major American manufacturers. It is a shame the IC was not marked. It probably explains why data on the IC is hard to find, unlike other similar clock chips of the era. I like the combination of Hughes Aircraft Corp and EMI. Hugo. |
26th Feb 2018, 2:43 pm | #12 |
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Re: EEC Nixie Clock mystery.
Having done a bit of research, I've found someone on another forum (where I am a moderator) who has repaired an EEC nixie clock (not this model) for the son of one of the original engineers at EEC.
Put feelers out for more information...
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