Slide Rules Are Still Amazing!!

Ғылым және технология

Oh, the Wonderful World Of Slide Rules! Is there nothing they can't do? Oh yea... Add. But still so Amazing! Enjoy!
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Пікірлер: 682

  • @wfpelletier4348
    @wfpelletier43484 жыл бұрын

    This brought back some fond memories. In my Junior year of high school (1975), I got the high score on a competitive math exam. (I even beat the seniors!) The prize was a beautiful aluminum Pickett slide rule that had a set of double-logarithmic scales in addition to the standard scales. The following year, everybody else was using TI-30 calculators, but I used that slide rule all through my senior year and even into my beginning college years. I still have it, along with its leather case and belt-strap. I actually pulled it out while I was watching this video and did the square root calculations with you. Thank you so much for this video.

  • @AcmeRacing
    @AcmeRacing4 жыл бұрын

    When I saw Hidden Figures I was sitting there thinking "Where the hell are the slide rules?" The engineers and the women who did computations prior to the advent of computers should have had slide rules, but there were NONE in sight.

  • @allanrichardson1468

    @allanrichardson1468

    3 жыл бұрын

    The people known as “computers” used electro-mechanical calculators, which were bulky, noisy, power-hungry predecessors of the later pocket calculators, in order to do precise calculations. They either printed or narrow endless rolls of paper (like ATM or cash register tape) or displayed each digit by rotating a wheel to display the digit behind a window. Slide rules were used by the engineers for ballpark accuracy, and the numbers were refined by sending the inputs to the computers - or to the electronic computers when they arrived.

  • @otakuribo
    @otakuribo4 жыл бұрын

    "I'd thank my dad, if he were still around." my feels: 😭♥️

  • @thom3124
    @thom31244 жыл бұрын

    I still have the slide rule that I got from a very old gentleman that was a friend of my mom. I got it for mowing his lawn. I was 14 at the time (now approaching 65) and he taught me how to use it. I used it all through high school and many years later in college. I still keep it in it's original leather case. Mine is a Dietzgen Trig Log Log rule

  • @fepatton
    @fepatton4 жыл бұрын

    I love slide rules! My grandmother gave me my grandfather's slide rule shortly after he died. He had apparently always intended to give me one, but by the time I was ready, calculators were a thing. I proudly carried it in my backpack in college, and even found an excuse to pull it out during an exam when my calculator's battery "died". I put a note on my paper to the effect of, "Forgive slight inaccuracies - last few answers done on a slide rule." :D Great video. We'll see if the price of slide rules on eBay goes up because of this!

  • @typograf62

    @typograf62

    3 жыл бұрын

    I always had a slide rule with me for any exam with the slightest risk of low battery. And then it became sort of superstition. And they are great for scaling. A circular version exist soley for scaling (for graphic work and layout). I know that versions existed for artillery (I've only seen a model for a mortar). And for dosis calculations (when the Bomb drops). I think I have one somewhere. As for regular slide rules I have 3, my father's (very small with physics constants and densities for Eiche, Aluminium, Messing, Kupfer, Granit and unreadable on the back), one from a flea market and one bought brand new from used building materials shop. Why? They might come in handy.

  • @pinklady7184

    @pinklady7184

    3 жыл бұрын

    typograf62 that is why I use solar-powered calculators.

  • @Mark64W

    @Mark64W

    2 жыл бұрын

    Great story , thank you for sharing !

  • @JosephWood1941-iz6mi

    @JosephWood1941-iz6mi

    2 ай бұрын

    I purchased my first slide rule in 1961. I still have it.

  • @cdorcey1735
    @cdorcey17353 жыл бұрын

    I've just learned that a slide rule can also be used to solve factorable quadratic equations. That is, if x^2+ax+b has real roots, r1 * r2 = b, and r1 + r2 = a. Since C against D is a constant ratio, CI against D is a constant product. After setting the slide such that CI*D = b (above), visually slide along the rule until you find the combination of CI and D to satisfy the "a" coefficient. I've seen several sets of instructions for slide rules, but only one of them had this procedure. One slide to rule them all, and in the darkness bind them.

  • @chaos.corner
    @chaos.corner4 жыл бұрын

    Pilots still learn to use slide-rules in the form of the E6B. It's interesting because it is circular (which works well due to the way logarithms work. You can see simplified versions on some aviator watches too.

  • @repeatdefender6032
    @repeatdefender60322 жыл бұрын

    I watched this when it came out and couldn’t understand it. I also was sleeping an average of 2 hours a night, I had really severe insomnia for almost 2 years. Watching it now I totally get it, it seems simple even. Little things like this make it evident how cognitively impaired not sleeping made me. I still have memory problems, fatigue, and some other random issues… sleep is precious, y’all.

  • @MattMcIrvin

    @MattMcIrvin

    7 ай бұрын

    Getting a CPAP cleared a lot of my brain fog.

  • @ya472
    @ya4724 жыл бұрын

    THANK YOU. After 46 years, the slide rule is simple and amazing. WHY didn't they teach this in highschool math class? I never heard about slide rule in public school and after being introduced to calculators, there was no incentive to investigate the slide rule. Even weirder, my dad was a highschool teacher and a principal.

  • @timinwsac

    @timinwsac

    2 жыл бұрын

    I remember it being taught in six grade in the early 60s. Still haven't been able to master it.

  • @someonespadre

    @someonespadre

    Жыл бұрын

    I have 2. A simple beginner Mannheim simplex rule by K+E and my Dad’s Dietzgen polymath rule, a lot more scales. The people who figured these things out were way smarter than me.

  • @dishmanw

    @dishmanw

    Жыл бұрын

    We used slide rules for my electronics class at vocational school, but that was back in 1979 - 1981. My instructor had worked on the Gemini space program. When I went to college, I got to use an HP-33c.

  • @PastorDATM
    @PastorDATM4 жыл бұрын

    My first Engineering class in college back in 1974 required us to use the Slide Rule for all computations. After that class, electronic calculators were permitted. My slide rule belonged to my father, a telephone company traffic engineer, and it was a bamboo Keuffel & Esser (K&E) brand. It came in a very heavy duty leather carrying case. For my first Electronic Calculator, also in 1974, I purchased a Texas Instruments (TI) model SR-10 for $110. It was called an “Electronic Slide Rule” although my father’s slide rule could actually perform more functions and it did not have batteries that needed to be charged. Fran, thanks 😊 so much for this video. It brought back many fond memories of my father and his awesome bamboo K&E slide rule. I’ll have to go looking for that slide rule today so I can ask my 9 grandkids and 2 great-grandkids if they might know what this cool 😎 contraption is used for. LOL 😂! Cheers! Dave

  • @michaelcherry8952
    @michaelcherry89524 жыл бұрын

    What a beautiful slide rule! Your Dad must have spent a lot for it back in the day. When Canada went metric, the gas station that I worked at gave away cardboard slide-rules for converting MPG to L/100 Km. Fuel consumption was important in the 70s! We also had stickers that people put on their speedometers to convert MPH to KPH (it would have been a bit awkward using a slide rule converter while driving!)

  • @Aengus42

    @Aengus42

    4 жыл бұрын

    We had a phase like that in the UK when our money went metric overnight in 1972 I think. There were slide rule calculators everywhere for ages!

  • @michaelcherry8952

    @michaelcherry8952

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@Aengus42 Terry Pratchett actually made fun of that in the novel "Good Omens". He had a footnote that explained the old money system (...Two Farthings = One Ha'penny. Two Ha'pennies = One Penny. Three Pennies = A Thrupenny Bit...etc.) He concludes by stating: "The British resisted decimalized currency for a long time because they thought it was too complicated." :-)

  • @lifeisgood12341
    @lifeisgood123414 жыл бұрын

    I've been running through a physics textbook from 1939 with just a slide rule, then checking the math with a calculator you'd be surprised at how accurate they are especially when you account for sigfigs

  • @bobholt5081
    @bobholt50814 жыл бұрын

    I had a slip-stick back in high school when I took a class in business machines. I even used a card punch machine. I can still hear the instructor telling us it was going to be the job of the future. About the time I moved on to my senior year pocket calculators hit the scene and that was the end of my slide rule days.

  • @KernArc
    @KernArc4 жыл бұрын

    That reminded me I have to "D scale" my coffee machine.

  • @mindykeyte7593

    @mindykeyte7593

    4 жыл бұрын

    Someone once told me they use "D Scale" on fishing boats, too.

  • @fazergazer

    @fazergazer

    3 жыл бұрын

    It’s a sine of the times

  • @TheRockMorton

    @TheRockMorton

    3 жыл бұрын

    Did you C scale before D scale?

  • @guloguloguy
    @guloguloguy24 күн бұрын

    WOW!!!! THANK YOU, VERY MUCH, FRAN, FOR THIS INFORMATIVE VIDEO, ON SOME OF THE AMAZING CAPABILITIES, OF THES DEVICES!!! I REMEMBER WHEN MY DAD, (a "DRAFTSMAN"), FIRST GOT A TEXAS INSTRUMENTS "TI-30" HAND-HELD CALCULATOR", BACK IN THE EARLY/MID 1970'S... I WAS, AND STILL AM FASCINATED BY THE MECHANICAL "SLIDE RULES"!!!! I REMEMBER LOVING TO FIND A VARIETY OF "NOMOGRAPHS" USED FOR A VARIETY OF SPECIFIC PURPOSES, SUCH AS "MECHANICAL SPRING" PROPERTIES, WEIGHT/VOLUMES/PRESSURES,... METAL ALLOY PROPERTIES... SOIL PROPERTIES, ELECTRONICS COMPONENT PROPERTIES, MOTOR SIZES/TORQUES/VOLTS/AMPS, WIRE SIZES, ETC.... WHERE CAN WE FING "SLIDE RULES?!... i'D LIKE TO GET ONE FOR USE IN WORKING ON MODEL AVIATION" RELATED HOBBY DESIGNING...

  • @joestephan1111
    @joestephan11113 жыл бұрын

    In 1959 my first subscription to Hot Rod magazine came with a cardboard slide rule set up for all kinds of car things, like matching the bore & stroke of an engine to show it's cubic inches. My father, an Air Force pilot at that time, had a circular one for pre-electronics plotting where they were and figuring out other data needed.

  • @lv_woodturner3899
    @lv_woodturner38994 жыл бұрын

    I still have the slide rule I purchased back in high school in the late 60's. Only slide rules were allowed in exams at university in the early 70's. Your video takes me back in time. Also reminds me of using log tables as well as the slide rule. For complicated calculations finding the decimal place was sometimes time consuming. Dave.

  • @Aengus42

    @Aengus42

    4 жыл бұрын

    I get the same from that Ti-30 as that's the beast my Aunt got for me at school. I was 16 in 1980 so it shows the change in a few years. Calculators were still banned in my school though & the start of every maths lesson would see the distribution of a pile of very tatty log books!

  • @lv_woodturner3899

    @lv_woodturner3899

    4 жыл бұрын

    My slide rule is a British Thornton P271. It is a single side slide rule so may not have as many functions as other models. Back in the time when I purchased this, Thornton made a lot of products for mathematics and engineering drawing. Dave.

  • @gordonwedman3179

    @gordonwedman3179

    4 жыл бұрын

    I still have mine from high school in the late 1960's. Used it all the way through University in the early 70's. All the hand held calculators available at that time were very expensive. The physics department had two TI45's bolted down in their common room but I used the breadbox sized calculator in the chemistry department. Now I have several hand helds including my HP41C that I used in grad school.

  • @paulrichmond6903

    @paulrichmond6903

    4 жыл бұрын

    Gordon, i’ve still got my HP 41 CX and still love it! Got the Printer, card reader, and tape drive as well. I’ve loaded into 41CX app on my iPad and my iPhone and use them daily. Best darn calculator ever made. Although, with the TI30, you could read in bed at night with the lights out. By the way, there is an HP41.org, (I think that’s the site), that still supports them.

  • @userjack6880
    @userjack68804 жыл бұрын

    A bit behind, working through a backlog of videos but... I saw this and lit up. I may be (relatively) young, but one thing my grandfather taught me years ago was to use a sliderule. I ended up with two of his slide rules - a Hemi 257 and a Hemi 259D. Both are really nice and have some neat features, like squares, roots, multiplication and division, etc... Sometimes, in this world of modern tech, it's just nice to use something physical. Especially when you need to consider significant digits. More decimal points doesn't always mean a more accurate calculation - your calculation should only be as good as your measurements.

  • @Sharklops
    @Sharklops4 жыл бұрын

    The Franlab jam at the end is badass

  • @coripuckett5596
    @coripuckett55964 жыл бұрын

    Yes they are, I remember back during my Jr. year in high school 1993, asking my electronics teacher to teach me how to use one... Which he did and he even gave me one. He was shocked because I was probably the only student he had in the 90’s with any interest in them....

  • @millomweb

    @millomweb

    4 жыл бұрын

    When I was 10, one of my teachers gave me a set of Napiers Bones.

  • @kevinalm6686

    @kevinalm6686

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@millomweb Oh, awesome! Wish I had a set of those in my collection. I'm jealous!

  • @millomweb

    @millomweb

    4 жыл бұрын

    Quite possibly the first teacher I knew to die - lung cancer. The second one - who had a son in the same class as me, committed suicide.

  • @DavidLindes

    @DavidLindes

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@millomweb condolences. :-/

  • @LandNfan
    @LandNfan4 жыл бұрын

    I learned to use one during high school honors chemistry in fall of 1962. That was on a cheap plastic one. Two years later I got a nifty Dietzgen before heading off to college. Years later, I got well acquainted with the circular version in the form of the Jeppesen E6B flight computer. I still have all three. You mentioned the accuracy of the slide rule. My chemistry and engineering teachers stressed that no computation can be any more precise than the least precise measurement involved in the calculation.

  • @jimbaritone6429
    @jimbaritone64292 жыл бұрын

    YES! Slide rules are STILL amazing, My "daily driver" had an aluminum frame and slide, but the really smooth ones used bamboo. I had a bit of a collection, donated by my engineering compatriots as they went "full calculator"; sadly, all were lost in a fire in the mid-1990's. There were odd shape or purpose slide rules, as you show, and it would be difficult to find some of them these days. When I took engineering, you could always pick us out by the belt scabbards for the slide rules - some 20-24 inches long. As much as I find my modern calculator very helpful, I miss the slide rule for some jobs.

  • @demopem
    @demopem4 жыл бұрын

    I still have the one I got in school in the 70s. Requires no battery, perfect for the zombie apocalypse. (And, I have a TI-30 calculator too!)

  • @millomweb

    @millomweb

    4 жыл бұрын

    My bro had/has a Ti-51-III It was rubbish compared to my Sharp EL-504. The buttons weren't so reliable and I don't think it was as accurate.

  • @theonlymudgel

    @theonlymudgel

    4 жыл бұрын

    Was given my slide rule in the mid 60s when I started high school. Still have it.

  • @dahdahditditditditditditda7536

    @dahdahditditditditditditda7536

    4 жыл бұрын

    Ha ha - I used to have one of those too. Dates us, kinda, doesn't it? Every once in a while I find one in an antique or collector's shop, and then I'm tempted to buy it. Then I think ... nah. I have the DataMath calculator from TI. I think it's the first one they ever made (for the general public). Works beautifully, and has that nice bright red LED readout - which is easy to read.

  • @AnthonyFrancisJones
    @AnthonyFrancisJones4 жыл бұрын

    Great - I still give them to my physics students with some instructions and let them play for a while as a way of thinking out of the box, understanding numbers and their relationships better and just a bit of fun. They seem to enjoy it!

  • @doctort1519
    @doctort15193 жыл бұрын

    I got through high school with a slide rule Slide rules are all about estimating Problem now is that students cannot estimate what a reasonable result should be Thanks for showing various types of slide rules This is a gigantic deal No joke Huge, gigantic, intergalactic, or bigger

  • @JuhaLaiho
    @JuhaLaiho4 жыл бұрын

    Thanks. I remember an electronics teacher in 1995 being sad for people who never learnt to use slide rules, commenting that those people never learned to actually think about the true accuracy of the calculations they made based on some measured values - as calculators just pour out that screenful of digits. I'm also too young to have actually learnt to use one, but have acquired a cuople along the way and played with them enough to do the base maths (multiplication and division), but this video was a very good demonstration on what all else these things can be capable of.

  • @wkg19591
    @wkg195914 жыл бұрын

    Yay! Slide rules :-) As a youth I'd watch old science fiction movies where the hero scientist would whip out the slide rule. I was sad that I couldn't afford to get one....fast forward a errrrr few years, I have lots of them, and they are still cool :-)

  • @jpolar394
    @jpolar3944 жыл бұрын

    I still have my slide made by Post. Plastic case and real glass. My algebra teacher gave it to me when I graduated high school. He even autographed the case for me.

  • @toothrobber8076
    @toothrobber80764 жыл бұрын

    I use a Castell 67/87 RB with an Addiator, a great tool to have near by

  • @michaelogden5958
    @michaelogden59584 жыл бұрын

    I ran across my old slide rule a while back in a time machine junk drawer. I actually used it in my early college days, circa early 70s, about the time when Texas Instruments and Hewlett-Packard started out with their calculators. I couldn't come even close to affording the early calculators so had to make do with my slide rule. Just for fun, I figured out (sorta remembered) how to do simple multiplication. In the same drawer was my "super fancy" HP calculator I used in the late 80s. It has this magnetic strip reader thing. One could use good old Reverse Polish Notation to write simple-ish programs and zip the mag strip into the reader to load the program into the calculator memory. Wash, rinse, and repeat. Pretty cool back in the day.

  • @jimbraslow1774
    @jimbraslow1774 Жыл бұрын

    Just before covid I hung a 6 ft. training slide rule in my shop classroom. Several students thought it was very cool. They went on line and bought them. Then watched KZread to learn how to use it. The thought it was so much fun to use them in math class because none of the teachers had ever seen one and did not what they were! I used mine back in the 60's.

  • @marlonprice4165
    @marlonprice41653 жыл бұрын

    I have always wanted to know how to use a slide rule. I remember seeing them in old movies and thinking how cool and smart they make you look. I’m definitely going to get one. Thank you so much Fran!!! Love you!

  • @video99couk
    @video99couk4 жыл бұрын

    I think we're about the same age. I got my first calculator in 1975, a Rockwell / Anita 30R "Slide Rule Memory" model which was branded House Of Fraser in the UK. But we were still taught how to use slide rules in secondary school so I bought a 6" model which was branded "WHSmith Simplified Rietz" made by Blundell, probably around 1977. Not that I can remember how to use it any more.

  • @Payne2view
    @Payne2view4 жыл бұрын

    This reminds me of when one of my professors showd us a slide rule in a tutorial meeting, just for the fun of it. He tried to show how easy it was but us "children of the pocket calculator" was left a bit fuddled. I too had my first pocket calculator in 1976, comlete with red LED numbers.

  • @gorillaau

    @gorillaau

    4 жыл бұрын

    Let me guess, a four banger (+,-,×,÷) and cost a good amount of cash?

  • @alandaters8547

    @alandaters8547

    3 жыл бұрын

    The trick to showing off a slip stick in the calculator age was to do a string of calculations, including a square or cube root. With practice a slide rule can be very quick at that. It slows down when you need to do simple addition or subtraction!

  • @jonnyphenomenon
    @jonnyphenomenon Жыл бұрын

    I've got a collection of almost a dozen really old slide rules, including a 7 foot long Pickett handing on my living room wall. hah! One thing I noticed almost immediately after I started learning how to use a slide rule, was that the more you understood the slide rule, the more you didn't need to use it at all. My intuition of the "patterns" of numbers grew immensely almost overnight. We should continue to teach them in schools for this purpose!

  • @hawksights
    @hawksights Жыл бұрын

    There are also caclulating discs for multiple purposes. For instance the geman Kriegsmarine used an Attack Disc to calculate things like interception courses, attack courses, predictions on a target, angle of bow etc. I built one of these and used it to play silent hunter III and it always worked pretty well.

  • @Blitterbug
    @Blitterbug4 жыл бұрын

    Yes! This is great content! Been fascinated with these and their predecessor, the Sector, for years. Thanks.

  • @FinnoUgricMachining
    @FinnoUgricMachining4 жыл бұрын

    I still have my Faber Castell Rietz 111/87 which is a slide rule for machine and electronics engineering. It is really handy tool for estimating and eyeballing things. I like it.

  • @whitehoose
    @whitehoose4 жыл бұрын

    Started with log tables, moved to a sliderule, progressed to a better sliderule. I seem to remember 2 decimal places was achievable in most cases. I then bought a Sinclair calculator, cost a king's ransom to buy and another to keep in batteries. Then one of my lecturers who was a real wheeler dealer turned up with a huge case of scientific calculators (with power units). They were all gone that morning. That same year there was a flood of calc makes and models, watches and all the trimmings and suddenly they were no longer "special". I still took my sliderule into exams, just because they didn't need batteries. But nostalgia and the visibility of a sliderule soon gave way to the pocketability of a calculator.

  • @portlyoldman
    @portlyoldman4 жыл бұрын

    I have a lovely collection of slide rules. Sadly, almost no one but me even knows what they are let alone appreciate them 🥴

  • @richardhaas39

    @richardhaas39

    4 жыл бұрын

    I worked with a security guard whose last name was Napier. I mentioned the slide rule to him. He did not know what I was talking about. I brought one in to show him what his namesake had created. He thanked me. But really, that he got to thirty years old with a name like that and never hear of a slide rule concerns me.

  • @TaneemSanity

    @TaneemSanity

    3 жыл бұрын

    kzread.info/dash/bejne/mo51m6epodi7nqg.html

  • @notlessgrossman163

    @notlessgrossman163

    3 жыл бұрын

    This brother got a Staedtler Mars Slide as a teen having read about them in one of Heinlein's book.

  • @portlyoldman

    @portlyoldman

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@notlessgrossman163 - envy...

  • @questionmark9684

    @questionmark9684

    3 жыл бұрын

    Hi Jim, I would be very thankful to see your collection and maybe some explanation. Thank you. Cheers Mark

  • @lesmaybury793
    @lesmaybury7932 жыл бұрын

    Oh that is so nostalgic. I still have my Faber Castell slide rule that my Dad bought for engineering college and taught me to use. The ubiquitous green box is witness to the years of use and abuse. He had the same model that he used throughout his work life in aircraft design. It took me through my technical college and apprenticeship. Calculators were creeping towards the end of my college time but they were not as quick as a slide rule. Thanks for showing this Fran.

  • @brennanlabs
    @brennanlabs4 жыл бұрын

    great memories. I wonder how many of us inherited slide rules from our Dads. thank you for the video... again

  • @GregInVancouver
    @GregInVancouver4 жыл бұрын

    Holy cow! Thanks Fran! This was the one thing I wanted to digest for my side project this week! :)

  • @gevmage
    @gevmage4 жыл бұрын

    I love this! I do remember a time when give-away scales like that were very common. I don't think I kept many of them; I think I regret that. It would be interesting to go over the mathematics of some of the scales of some of the give-away scales, like the electrical or the radio ones. Mostly just "X is proportional to the square of Y" kind of thing, but it's interesting to look at the analytical calculation as compared to the physical scale. Great video! Love it!

  • @phineasrumson3116
    @phineasrumson31164 жыл бұрын

    Still have mine from college back in the early 70's; a Pickett 880.

  • @NeoMorphUK
    @NeoMorphUK4 жыл бұрын

    My uncle gave me a slide rule for a birthday present back in the 70’s. I think it was an eclipse. Sadly I didn’t treat it well as it was the beginning of the hand calculator era. Kids these days don’t know how to use slide rules or even log tables... I use to love using log tables.

  • @anotheruser9876
    @anotheruser98764 жыл бұрын

    I found a slide rule at a thrift store a couple of weeks ago. The moment I saw it my jaw dropped, eyes popped open, and inhaled audibly. I was looking for one since forever and now I have it and it only cost me $3.35 (Beaver bucks, as is the tradition here in Soviet Canuckistan).

  • @dri50
    @dri504 жыл бұрын

    I worked for a Land Surveyor during High School (mid 60's). At that time the Crew Chief carried around a small book of trig tables for doing computations in the field. I guess things needed to be more accurate than 3 places. But in the 80's I took flight training and you had to learn how to use a circular slide rule for navigation. I'm sure I still have my slide rules from school. Neat Stuff!

  • @davidaylsworth8964
    @davidaylsworth8964 Жыл бұрын

    I paused this video and grabbed my slide rule to follow along with the video. Your collection of purposeful rules was really interesting.

  • @paulbennett4548
    @paulbennett45484 жыл бұрын

    Enjoyed this one Fran, started collage in 67 with the slide rule and the log table books added a four function calculator (red LED display) in 72 as I finished. The slide rule didn't need batteries, but beer did effect the slide rule for some reason.

  • @JUANKERR2000
    @JUANKERR20003 жыл бұрын

    1:08 That slide rule looks remarkably like the one I used throughout my college and university years, and well into my early engineering career; a Faber-Castell 1/98 Electro, if memory serves me well. It is in my desk now, having outlived many newfangled calculators, and it needs no batteries!

  • @oldmanofcotati
    @oldmanofcotati3 жыл бұрын

    I still have my slide-rules from vocational High School here in San Francisco in the 60's. I finally got a vintage super quality Pickett bamboo unit. I like Fran.

  • @NBCRGraphicDesign
    @NBCRGraphicDesign4 жыл бұрын

    Learned the slide rule in 10th grade Chem class....1974. Years later I'm a teacher at my old school and strolling through the hallways in the summer and happen to see the teacher's demonstrator slide rule sticking out of a garbage can... A 6ft yellow Pickett slide rule! I fish it out if the garbage and hide it in my classroom's darkroom. The rule now lives in my woodshop at home. flic.kr/p/QZtYMS No pocket for your TI-30? Mine came with a faux denim belt-mounted zipper bag.

  • @mikepillittere7486
    @mikepillittere74863 жыл бұрын

    When I was in the Air Force in 1985, during my training as a imagery interpreter specialist (imagery intelligence stuff), we did our photogrammetry calculations using a slide rule. In fact, we had a separate class to teach us how to do the same calculations on a pocket calculator. Their logic was, "in the field, if your calculator battery dies, you'd be out of luck if you don't know 'slip stick'." I still have mine, along with the accompanying log tables. Good times!

  • @twicebittenthasme5545
    @twicebittenthasme55454 жыл бұрын

    We used slide rules in high school. I went to West Catholic on 49th & Chestnut, way back in the stone ages. In grade school, we had to do all calculations on paper ...and show all work. Fun times. Cool video. Thank you for sharing!

  • @madjohnshaft
    @madjohnshaft Жыл бұрын

    My bachelors is in electrical engineering. That was in the 80s and, of the many classes, one that I remember well is a professor showing us how to use a slide rule just for fun.

  • @Aengus42
    @Aengus424 жыл бұрын

    You've reminded me of "Slipstick" Libby in Heinlein's books! Thanks Fran, I've known of these devices but never seen one used close up. Facinating!

  • @scharkalvin
    @scharkalvin4 жыл бұрын

    I still have my Pickett N1010SL-ES Super Power Trig slide rule from my college days.

  • @elmoreglidingclub3030
    @elmoreglidingclub30303 жыл бұрын

    Good stuff!! I love my slide rule. And they’re amazingly effective for teaching math, for giving it context. When students can see what’s going on in a calculation they make a strong connection.

  • @dreadnaught2707
    @dreadnaught27074 жыл бұрын

    The cursor comes into it's own when you do a string of calculations one after the other.

  • @geoffbuck6865

    @geoffbuck6865

    4 жыл бұрын

    Dread Naught : absolutely! When I was reading Mech Eng at university in the late 60s (!), the slide rule could happily give perfectly adequate answers to long calculations by using the cursor and end flipping it as necessary. The only thing left was to locate the decimal point but that helped you use basic arithmetic. And slide rules where SO elegant ....

  • @limrc1
    @limrc14 жыл бұрын

    I love this channel; brings back the good old days! I was an engineering student back in the early 70s and have gone through several slide rules. They warp, difficult to slide (toothpaste helped) and if you drop that thing, then it's time to get a new one. You need to constantly tune it up. When the basic +-x/ calculator came out, I can still calculate faster with the slide rule. But when the scientific calculator came out, then I had to give up all my slide rules including a circular kind. I remember how different students would assert that their calculation is better and even end up fighting. The scientific calculator solved that problem. Gotta love your TI-30. I'm a calculator collector and the one I have died. I still have my TI-58c and TI-59. I preferred the HP-41c over TI because of its RPN. The underlying principle of the slide rule will never disappear. It's even in your smartphone or every time your turn or slide that volume control. Thanks for sharing and keep them videos a coming!

  • @pay9011
    @pay90114 жыл бұрын

    Be wary of buying used slide rules on eBay. If a price seems very good, there's probably something wrong with it. Good ones are pretty expensive nowadays. The problem with one I bought was the 'springs' that keep the cursor aligned and in place were broken.

  • @generatorjohn4537
    @generatorjohn45374 жыл бұрын

    I was taught how to use a slide rule in high school, electronics 1 & 2, years 1972 to 1974. The teacher was fantastic. Taught us scientific notation along with the slide rule. Best years of high school was in that class. Learned alot from that man. Thanks Fran.

  • @JohnKelly2
    @JohnKelly24 жыл бұрын

    I ran across a book at the library years ago that was a published diary Arthur C Clarke kept during the filming of 2001. One of the entries was something like: "Taught Stanley (Kubrick) to use a slide rule. He was so fascinated, he canceled filming for the day."

  • @Cadwaladr
    @Cadwaladr4 жыл бұрын

    I have a book on how to use a slide rule by Isaac Asimov. In the introduction he says, "we have all heard these days of the invention of electronic computers, but to use an electronic computer to do simple arithmetic would be like shooting a fly with naval artillery."

  • @mrsjohnson1743
    @mrsjohnson17434 жыл бұрын

    That Shure sliderule is really neat! When we learned to use them in school, I remember that our worksheets had a narrow ‘range’ of acceptable answers. I always marveled at how they nicely they worked. Fun video Fran.

  • @turnermorgan1176
    @turnermorgan11764 жыл бұрын

    I still have my K+E Deci-Lon from high school/college days! Plus the six-inch K+E "pocket" rule that has the same scales. I have a circular Pickett rule which I didn't use very much because the "folded" scales were hard to locate where the result was! I still use it occasionally just to stay "proficient" with it. Amazing devices. And, no batteries required. But, a little difficult to use when the lights go out!

  • @Mike500912
    @Mike5009124 жыл бұрын

    Yes, I was using a slide rule at Uni in the 60's. Still have my old slide rule from back then. Also carry my old E6B when flying which is a circular slide rule for navigation and many other calcs (eg. conversions).

  • @MattMcIrvin
    @MattMcIrvin3 жыл бұрын

    My dad has a Sun Hemmi bamboo slide rule he got for college that is a chemical engineer's model--one side has regular slide-rule scales similar to yours, but instead of more advanced mathematical functions, the scales on the back are all about things like molecular weights of various materials and density and pressure conversions. It has a sort of leather scabbard. Nice-looking except the glass of the cursor has a big crack in it. I was also *just* barely too young to ever really learn to use one. Around 1976 or '77, he bought an Omron scientific calculator (its model number was 86SR which I think actually stood for "slide rule"), one of the first affordable models with trig and hyperbolic functions and such, and it impressed him enough that he got me one. So I had that from an early age.

  • @petermach8635
    @petermach8635 Жыл бұрын

    Excellent ..... !! I used slide rules here in the UK right through school 1969 to 75 but we still weren't allowed to use them in exams. My best friend's father spent a year teaching in California and brought back the first digital calculator we'd ever seen, probably in 1973/4. In a drawing office for a huge civil engineering project that I visited with my father the draughtmen were still using a lever operated calculating engine set on a desk at the front of the drawing office at about that time also. As an aside, at my Junior school I used to walk past Merchiston Tower in Edinburgh twice a day, where John Napier, the 8th Laird and the inventor of Logarithms was born .... we were shown "Napier's Bones" as a tool for learning learning multiplication.

  • @bob4analog
    @bob4analog4 жыл бұрын

    Thanks, you make understnding the slide rule easy. Love the reactance slider! I have that one and a couple of other electronic sliders. Awesome references for quick easy solutions.

  • @diogenes34
    @diogenes34 Жыл бұрын

    A few years ago I gave my son the Pickett 1010 I used when I was in the Marine Corps over half a century ago. Your video brought back memories from long ago. I can say that all of my favorite memories are of the past.😱😁

  • @larrytaylor2903
    @larrytaylor29034 жыл бұрын

    The true secret of the slide rule is scientific notation. Converting everything to a number between one and ten, with an exponent. Along with the simple number, exponents are added or subtracted. Very large or very small numbers are easily dealt with. Perfect for electronics.

  • @powaybob

    @powaybob

    4 жыл бұрын

    And perfect for chemistry too.

  • @rohnkd4hct260
    @rohnkd4hct2604 жыл бұрын

    You ever get used to using one they can be fun. Back when I was teaching Firemen about fire pump operation, we had a slide rule to determine fire streams. Found it the other day and, still remember how to use it. Could have used that one you have from SHURE back when I was setting up sound systems for shows.

  • @lazyfox1954
    @lazyfox1954 Жыл бұрын

    I was taught how to use a slide rule in Secondary School in the early 1950's. We could use them in class and at home, but not during examinations! I still have both of mine, a Sun-Hemmi 149A (6") and a Sun-Hemmi 190 (12"). I used them for many years until electronic calculators came along. I went through several of those, ending up with an HP 42S. My grandchildren think that the slide rule is magic - they never learned about logarithms and trig functions.

  • @tonberrytoby
    @tonberrytoby4 жыл бұрын

    It is just so hard to get a good sliderule these days. I still have an old half broken sliderule in my desk, because it has an amazing compound interest scale. For practical stuff I mostly switched to nomographs, because I can print those with a normal printer in case I need special conversion. While I never formally learned to use a sliderule (excluding a nonius like on the calipers) our university lab still gave out printed nomographs especially on the microwave side. Like converting from 50Ohm to 75Ohm base, or converting from resistances to reflections.

  • @Krmpfpks
    @Krmpfpks4 жыл бұрын

    I went to school in the 90s and I always had calculators at my disposal. For fun I decided to use an old HP engineering calculator with reverse polish notation for school and I also found someone to teach me the slide rule. Much more fun than the dumb calculators where you don’t even need to now the order of operations.

  • @ya472

    @ya472

    4 жыл бұрын

    know :-)

  • @TnseWlms
    @TnseWlms Жыл бұрын

    I saw a sign in a playground: Slide Rules: 1. Form an orderly line at the bottom of the ladder. 2. Do not slide down until the slide is clear and free. 3. No climbing up the chute. 4. Calculating devices with logarithmically spaced calibrations.

  • @afriedli
    @afriedli4 жыл бұрын

    There is no limit to the power of a slide rule - even to the point of deciding the fate of humanity, as per Strangelove. Everything can be used for good or ill.

  • @elfenmagix8173
    @elfenmagix81734 жыл бұрын

    You're after my heart again though I never mentioned the first time. I have not used a sliderule since high school and that was in 1980... Excellent video on the subject! Keep up the good work!

  • @RowanPartridge
    @RowanPartridge Жыл бұрын

    I was in the last cadre of high school students in Australia (circa 1975) who were taught the slide rule in Mathematics class...Faber Castell studio, I recall. Learning to fly, I used a Jeppersen Computer, circular slide rule for navigation and performance calculations. Now I have a collection of some 40 slide rules, which I use whenever opportunity arises. I joy in my "new-in-box" FC 2/83 N and its little brother 62/83 N Novo Duplex (doncha love the names of these beautiful instruments), as well as a selection of Pickets, KE, Fish, etc. Some years ago, my teacher-librarian wife arranged for me to teach classes to Primary School students in her school, for which I equipped a set of Aristo student slide rules and made up some teaching plans (on Powerpoint, forgive me!). Now I make it a point when traveling to keep in my pocket a tiny 5" Sun Hemmi which I can whip out when a calculation is needed; smart phone, nah! Paired with my favorite fountain pen, I am able to embarrass my adult children with Grandpa's mathematical sophistication. Wonderful video series, Fran.

  • @therugburnz
    @therugburnz4 жыл бұрын

    I had a three sided one when I was a kid. Had other weird computery promo items my Pa gave me. Most he got at at computer/data possessing conferences in the late 1960's. He also brought home Lindy's cheesecake on occasion . Good Times

  • @JanBinnendijk
    @JanBinnendijk10 ай бұрын

    I got a slide rule from a colleague back in 2005, I started working as an engineer, and i used it to do calculations..i sort off grew fond of these so i started designing them myself for machining calculations, and not to long ago i made a barrel shaped one that could fit in your pocket...

  • @drasco61084
    @drasco610844 жыл бұрын

    Love the chill new music at the end of the videos! Wow I always thought slide rules were complicated. Guess I just needed the instructions haha

  • @jimlongley9531
    @jimlongley95314 жыл бұрын

    Still have my K&E log log, or whatever it was, from my high school and college days. My father was an engineer (MS MIT) for the phone company and by proper reduction and manipulation could calculate a ridiculous number of decimal places. Of course he carried a slide rule on him at all times, and the family joke was that he was such an engineer that if our mother asked him what 2x2 was, he would whip out his faithful "slipstick" and in a flurry of baby powder (talc enhances the slipperiness) would announce "2 x 2 is 3.9999, oh hell, call it four."

  • @DavidSmith-ss1cg
    @DavidSmith-ss1cg Жыл бұрын

    I just discovered your channels, and I'm really happy to see this video. I went to college for electronics in 1974 and part of the curriculum was a slide rule course. Those students who were Vietnam Vets were the only students allowed to have calculators, because a basic 4 function calculator cost over $100, and the Vets - with the GI Bill - were the only ones who could afford it.

  • @RealUnimportant
    @RealUnimportant4 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for this Fran! I remember watching my Dad use a slide rule for a few years after he got his first calculator, but I never learned how... Recently found a couple very cheap in a charity store, one in a case but neither with instructions... now I can learn how to use them properly!

  • @johncolvin2561

    @johncolvin2561

    4 жыл бұрын

    The instructions can be found here. www.sliderulemuseum.com/SR_Class/OS-ISRM_SlideRuleSeminar.pdf

  • @niblismusic783
    @niblismusic7834 жыл бұрын

    It's interesting to note that Slide Rule s are called Logarithmic Rules in some countries.

  • @kensmith5694

    @kensmith5694

    4 жыл бұрын

    A few places call them "napier bones" IIRC

  • @_John_Sean_Walker

    @_John_Sean_Walker

    4 жыл бұрын

    Calculate Rule.

  • @miker252
    @miker2524 жыл бұрын

    I remember using one in my 1970 elecrronics tech class. It worked well with scientific notation working with large and small numbers to calculate tuned RLC circuit etc

  • @Weird_Old_Uncle_Kenny
    @Weird_Old_Uncle_Kenny3 жыл бұрын

    My dad worked for a NASA subcontractor, used his trusty slide rule. When Texas Instruments came out with the first "Electronic Slide Rule" available to the public, he already had one, I think he was given a prototype. He never used the mechanical version ever again...

  • @conheywood6528
    @conheywood65284 жыл бұрын

    I met a design engineer who swore by his slide rule. He could see which of his stock components was the nearest size to the output of the slide rule without having to work it out and made selecting the correct size unit much quicker.

  • @ReverendFuzzy
    @ReverendFuzzy4 жыл бұрын

    Yea verily... sliderules do indeed still rock.

  • @dunc1958
    @dunc19584 жыл бұрын

    I still have my Helix A103W slide rule I got in 1969, I have to admit I've become a little rusty in using it so thank you for the refresher.

  • @PaulKostrzewa
    @PaulKostrzewa4 жыл бұрын

    My Dad was a Technical Illustrator and I always wondered how slide rules worked... great topic.

  • @jaytc3218
    @jaytc32182 жыл бұрын

    I have two Pickett slide rules. They're re pretty amazing when you think about the fact that the Apollo astronauts took them to the moon. Slide rules are great at multiplication and division, addition and subtraction (which you "can" do if you jump through some hoops), and, of course, trig log functions. Most slide rules are accurate to the 2nd or "maybe" the 3rd decimal place which is perfect for most real-world applications.

  • @spiderjuice9874
    @spiderjuice98744 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for this much-needed refresher on these things. I have my Dad's too.

  • @jamesmachado9366

    @jamesmachado9366

    4 жыл бұрын

    Got my dad's too. Thanks dad.

  • @nobbyse16
    @nobbyse164 жыл бұрын

    Thanks Fran, never had a clue about slide rules at school...now I understand

  • @maxheadrom3088
    @maxheadrom30882 жыл бұрын

    My grandfather was an engineer (studied in Brazil during the 1930s) and was self taught from there on - worked with radio, telecomunications and had some radio crystal patents. Became a professor at an important university in the Power Generation and Distribution here. I have his slide rule - made of wood with a bunch of scales. Slide rules still survive on aviator style wrist watches, btw! Seymour Cray said on a lecture (KZread) that the cool kid in his time used round slie rules. I would love to see a video about them! Oh ... btw, my mom's slide rule is still around - will be my nephew's soon. She studied where her fatgher thought and graduated in 1963. NOTE: there's a site that allows you to print your own slide rule!!! It also has a template for volume on conic cups - capuccino was never so easy!

  • @MrElectrowhiz
    @MrElectrowhiz4 жыл бұрын

    I just found a Pickett slide rule at a yard sale. This video refreshed my memory about some basic uses. I had to get it out so I can follow along. Thank you.

  • @pirwzy
    @pirwzy3 жыл бұрын

    "How did they get to the moon just using slide rules?" "Have you ever learned to use a slide rule? They're amazing, it's no wonder we used them to get to the moon."

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