It is a little fat in diameter, but the other caveat is, it would be awefully touchy. The original ones in the Pulsars are actually a magnetized mercury/iron droplet, that strongly tries to stay against the steel contacts. You can peel the silicone off the top of a Pulsar tilt switch, turn the switch upside down with a relaxed movement, and the ball of mercury will just hang there in mid-air, tight against the contacts. Takes a certain amount of "G" force to jar it loose - you know, that old "flick".. You actually will get the occasional P4 module that doesn't run correctly unless you give it a firm smack to jar the mercury loose, and it will work perfectly while kept upside down(mercury away from the contacts. Soon as the contact is closed it is back off.

Programming is scrambled, time to remove the mercury switch and go "flick-less".

Normally the action that activates a P4 or 503 is : switch is closed, switch is open for like 1/10 second or less, switch is back closed, display lights for 3 seconds.
A shame about the 503/502 module - they don't seem to fail often, but are difficult to repair. The "Pulse" has similar construction issues that limit repair-ability, IMO.

http://www.retroleds.com -
Sales of vintage LED, LCD, analog watches,
parts and gadgets -
repair tutorials & tips
Nov. 2022 - back in business!! BItter divorce is in home stretch, come grabs some great deals, I had to open the safe . . . damn attorneys. piss.