The circuit board material of the straight 8 front panel is fragile. The resin used melts at soldering temperatures. As a consequence my front panel was munged up before I got it. Foils lifted kind of thing. I decided when I next took it apart I would replace with LED's. Around 1995 I had some super bright white LED's and I worked out an appropriate current limiting resister value and replaced three bulbs with LEDs. They work but the color temp was far too blue. Also they activate at far too low of current and will trigger from cross talk in the wiring when the cpu is running. They also turn on and off too quickly. The thermal inertia of a filament is missing.
If you were a bit crazy you could use a CPU with an 8 bit A/D and drive a color LED to accurately emulate a bulb. Simpler is something like this. Bulb lead | +----+---+ +---+ \ | |LED| / --- +---+ \ --- | / | +----+---+ \ / \ / ----- --- - Parts list is LED, two resistors, and a cap. The resistor on the bottom is to limit the brightness. The resistor in parallel with the LED is to control the LAMP off brightness and cross talk illumination. The cap is used to slow down the on/off time and make it look more like it has some thermal mass. The minimum needed to make this work is the LED and the series resistor. With modern super bright LEDs I would sand off the dome making a flat face which diffuses the output making it unfocused. I am also betting that 1 ma will be too bright but lets shoot for that. In the case of the 8/e with an 8 volt lamp driver (assumption) if you want 1 ma of current and the LED is ~3 volts for the white ones. (8 volts - 3 volts)/0.001 amps gives a resistance of 5000 ohms. I have seen white LEDs with a voltage of 2.7 and up to 3.2 and this gives a range of 4.8 k to 5.3 k for a 1 ma current. Depending on what you get for LED's will determine the value of the resistors needed. My 8/e variant is a DECSet 8000 and the front panel has a red filter so it would look pretty much the same with lamps or period correct red LEDs. Best Wishes! -- Doug Ingraham PDP-8 SN 1175