HCHTech
Well-Known Member
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- Pittsburgh, PA - USA
I am; we used to do differential equation calculations on those 16-digit(?) Monroe (I think) mechanical calculators in numerical analysis class at Waterloo in the early '60s. They would chug away, one digit at a time, grinding out the result -- until they locked up and you'd have to start over. I love this old stuff. Never heard of acoustic memory, although we studied different memory devices in college in the late '50s, like drum storage, CRT storage, etc. Magical times.I'm not quite old enough to remember using mechanical calculators
I remember my dad had one of the original Sinclair Cambridge calculators..this model here.. 1973.
http://kevinrye.net/index_files/sinclair_cambridge_vintage_calculator.php

The first calculator I remember seeing my dad with was one of these:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TI-30]
How old are you, and your dad? I used to work on one of those at IBM in '65 and for several years later. How many knew that that card reader/punch was capable of reading from the output hopper? I modified a card version of the OS to read from it and the input hopper, the tape drives and DASD drives while printing on that 1403 printer, one at a time or in combination, to demo the system and dazzle the prospective customers. LOL. The system (System/360-65) had to be booted by dialing in the boot code via the dials on the front console. Those were the days.Growing up, he also owned the first computer I ever worked on, which was one of these with 32k of memory
The everyday calculator I use on my Android phone is a remarkably accurate photo-realistic emulation of the TI-58 I first owned back in 1978, and it makes me smile every time I use it.
I've got a HP 15C. It's not the 46CV that is my all time fav but it's close since I owned a 15C as well. I still have my 46CV and it still works when I have the batteries in it. But I'll admit I'm more than a bit rusty on the RPN stuff.
How old are you, and your dad?
Ah, okay, thanks. Fascinating history. I wouldn't want to be one of the CEs that were responsible for that catastrophe. I can imaging what they cost back then. IBM was great to work for back then; not sure about today, as the competition is fierce today and it's a different world.My Dad is 82, I am 59
I remember the cartridge drives (made by CDC, I think) but honestly don't remember having to spin them up. The bottoms were exposed until you put them in the drive assembly shown in the post above this one, or the carrier. Anybody program an IBM 407 accounting machine? (raises hand.) LOL. Geezers!how many of you "oldsters" remember the day when you had to "hand spin-up" some of those huge hard drives?
I remember the cartridge drives (made by CDC, I think) but honestly don't remember having to spin them up. The bottoms were exposed until you put them in the drive assembly shown in the post above this one, or the carrier. Anybody program an IBM 407 accounting machine? (raises hand.) LOL. Geezers!