Privet! Kak dela?
Privet! Horosho!.. I mean... good!
Rabid clock fanatics are gobbling them up
Yes, I know about many various designes based on nixie tubes. And often
nixie tubes are messed up with
VFD ones.
Any hamfests in Rossiya? (There is of course eBay.)
I'm afraid to be wrong... but there no "hamfests" in Russia. Or they are very unpopular and local.
Let me tell you something I know about it.
I war born in USSR, but I was a kid. I started to interest in electronics and HAM in middle nineties. USSR came apart in 1991, so there were as we call them here "dashing nineties" (
"?? ?": no limits, no laws, no money/or much stolen, misery,
gangsters on Mercedeses and BMW with toned windows) and I could not afford anything to my hobbies because of no money.
In USSR HAM were well spreaded everywere. There were such things as... I don't know correct english term... HAM-schools, we call them "
??
" (literally "radio-circles"
). Children could go and learn electronics and HAM in groups. But after that you can only forget about it or buy licence, hardware and go to broadcasting. I don't know anything about "hamfests" at that time. It was USSR, you could be spied everywere.
After 1991 all these things almost died. Most of ham-schools closed, there were no money for something.
Now there are still some ham-schools left, but they are small and not well-known (first three attached pictures).
No hamfests. As I understand - it is place were many ham and electronic enthusiasts can meet each other, demonstrate some of their projects to each other, have a conference. I don't know about any of them in Russia and especially in Moscow. It has to be a place, but who will pay rent for it?
In 90th there only were electronics and ham specific flea markets, few of them in Moscow (2-3 maybe). Now they almost collapsed. There only left some general spontaneous flea markets were you hardly can find something electronic, usually nothing (see photos #4 and #5). All you can find - crappy old test equipment I was talking about earlier.
So I really want to know, what was (and actually is) in other countries (not USSR) about good test equipment.
I remember as a kid watching Scientific American Journal on PBS and they had a Russian edition and Peter Graves visited Alexey Pajitnov (?? ) the man behind the game Tetris and they were asking him what it was like and he talked about how hard it was to get technology and how there were so many government restrictions. He said it was legal to own a computer, and legal to own a printer, but not both. Probably to cut down on anti-soviet propaganda.
I can not tell you exactly about computer+printer in USSR. But! There were some very cheap things in USSR (bread, ice cream and other food), free (school, higher education, medicine). But something was way too expensive: computers, cars. Family could only have one car (produced in USSR only of course, and all of them were bad quality... do you know brand "LADA"?..
) and they must work to pay for it for ages. Similar things with computer. If you had some computer at home - you were very rich then.
But computers also can be only soviet. So only places were you could see some computers were computer centers and some schools. Almost all soviet computers were rip off copies of "capitalist west" ones (Atari, IBM XT, ZX Spectrum, you can see some of them:
one,
two,
three,
four and so on). But due to well spread eletcronics hobby some enthusiasts made their own PCBs from schematics, searched for deficit parts and built their own variations (ZX was first place in copy rating).