Unfortunately I didn't take many pictures when I had it apart, had I had the sense to do that, I'd have avoided this situation in the first place.
I'd be ok paying for a manual if I knew it was for the right thing and had the information I need, however the "Lumitime" name was used on a lot of products including later LED digital clocks and clock radios. I suppose I could keep an eye out for another similar clock and more carefully disassemble that one, hopefully getting both going.
I replaced all the neon bulbs in it as I had to desolder them all to get the frame off the PCB to replace a bad resistor and reinstalling the old bulbs with very short leads was almost impossible. About a dozen of them were in bad shape and heavily darkened, mostly those that are on the most. Curiously though the two that are lit continuously to illuminate the starburst were in great shape, I don't know why they held up so well. These are run with 39k resistors on 120V which strikes me as driving them pretty hard, makes me wonder if they should be NE-2H lamps but I had a whole bag of regular NE-2 so I used those for now.