It's odd, but the
ONLY numitrons I've
ever encountered in the
field... ahem... have been in agricultural equipment. Pardon my pun...
The only device I own that has a numitron is an item I picked up at a thrift/antique store a couple years back. It was CLEARLY a one off, fully custom gadget. It was clearly hand made. I don't recall the function, but it was some manner of equipment someone would have used in an agricultural setting. Obviously the other numitron I'd encountered was in the Cyclo 400 planter monitor I previously mentioned my father having in his tractor when I was a kid.
Even though this is primarily nixies, I'll try to remember to get a shot of the device next time I am at my storage unit.
I suppose, it makes sense, given the fact that I live in an extremely rural location. While test equipment, lab equipment, and general digital devices are the first things that typically come to mind when one thinks nixies and numitrons... There really aren't any such industries locally. Best option would be the testing lab I work at, and they don't have any electronic equipment much older than 1980s. They actually keep their equipment reasonably up to date, at least by terms of usability and accuracy.
The cutting edge in technology developing in an area such as where I live, was bound to be the latest and greatest in farming machinery. In the 1970s, most rural families likely had a radio or two,
one TV, not necessarily even a color model, and nothing beyond those two items more complex than your typical kitchen appliances and an electric clock (almost always in the kitchen, it would seem)... Yeah, the best tech was gonna be the fancy accessories in the newest farm equipment. Local banks might have made the switch to electronic calculators, but many small banks would still be using mechanical adders, and a family might have eventually got one of the new-fangled pocket calculators, once they dropped below $25... Half novelty, and half to make tax season and managing the budget less of a burden. Given the garage sale findings when I was a kid... People were just as likely to still just have mechanical calculators back then.
We got digital seed flow monitors in the 1970s. We had even more digital readouts in the tractors in the 1980s. Ground speed radar, GPS, and auto "row drive" were introduced in the late 90s and in the 2000s. Now there are even driverless tractors (both follow the leader and fully autonomous types). Agriculture is always at the cutting edge. Small time farmers just get the hand me downs!
We were using that little numitron equipped flow monitor through the 80s... Maybe even into the 90s. My grandmother bought a few houses in town in the mid 1970s, when realestate was low. She rented those out for years, and then sold them in the 90s... We
still had pre-owned tractors!
I suppose, tho point of my long and rambling mental wanderings, is that devoid of any tech industries, the only real tech industry in my local would have been agriculture itself. That's why I only ever find ag equipment with these retro display technologies... All my goodies have to come by way of eBay and exorborant expendetures!
RIP wallet!