Elektronika 7: Difference between revisions
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[[Image:EL-7.JPG|thumb|right|A typical Electronics 7 clock]] |
[[Image:EL-7.JPG|thumb|right|A typical Electronics 7 clock]] |
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'''Electronics 7''' is a [[Soviet Russian]] brand of [[Seven-segment display|seven-segment]] [[Industry|industrial]] [[digital clock]]s with four or eleven seven-segment [[Electroluminescence|luminescent]] digits. It had a separate binary-to-seven-segment decoder board for each digit, while the actual timekeeping was done by a main board which emitted the digits of the time as [[binary code]]. Most models used Russian-made [[Vacuum fluorescent display|vacuum-fluorescent indicators]], but there were also models based on [[light-emitting diode]]s. All the street and wall clocks were based on a kit by the "Reflector" factory in [[Saratov]], and many remain in use at administrative and industrial premises in [[Russia]]. |
'''Electronics 7''' is a [[Soviet Russian]] brand of [[Seven-segment display|seven-segment]] [[Industry|industrial]] [[digital clock]]s with four or eleven seven-segment [[Electroluminescence|luminescent]] digits. It had a separate binary-to-seven-segment decoder board for each digit, while the actual timekeeping was done by a main board which emitted the digits of the time as [[binary code]]. Most models used Russian-made [[Vacuum fluorescent display|vacuum-fluorescent indicators]], but there were also models based on [[light-emitting diode]]s. All the street and wall clocks were based on a kit produced by the "Reflector" factory in [[Saratov]], and many remain in use at administrative and industrial premises in [[Russia]]. |
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[[Category:Clock brands]] |
[[Category:Clock brands]] |
Revision as of 14:58, 14 November 2017
Electronics 7 is a Soviet Russian brand of seven-segment industrial digital clocks with four or eleven seven-segment luminescent digits. It had a separate binary-to-seven-segment decoder board for each digit, while the actual timekeeping was done by a main board which emitted the digits of the time as binary code. Most models used Russian-made vacuum-fluorescent indicators, but there were also models based on light-emitting diodes. All the street and wall clocks were based on a kit produced by the "Reflector" factory in Saratov, and many remain in use at administrative and industrial premises in Russia.