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Slide Rules
Posted: Tue Oct 19, 2010 8:19 pm
by Katharine
Is 'Run a slide rule over it' supposed to be trendy speak now? (I heard it today as part of a trail for tomorrow's coverage of the Cuts on R4)
As someone who can actually use a slide rule and still has one, I wince when I hear it. I imagine many think they can do everything calculators can, they can't do addition and subtraction. You have to know what you are doing when using one, as you have to work out where the decimal point goes in the answer.
I did not use a slide rule at CH, I learnt later, when in Ghana I taught using one, and we had a 6 foot one for demonstration purposes. It was quite a feat manipulating it over your head!
Re: Slide Rules
Posted: Tue Oct 19, 2010 8:45 pm
by midget
My boss always referred to a slide rule as a guessing stick. I think we have one tucked away at home, and a couple of weeks ago we had a few in the Hospice shop. I think I was the only person there who knew what they were and how to use them.
I have a faint memory of Miss Bushell (physics) teaching us how to use one.
Re: Slide Rules
Posted: Tue Oct 19, 2010 8:56 pm
by englishangel
My husband used one at Uni. and one of his mates had the first calculator I ever saw, I think it was £25.00 (1973), I never learned though, and I doubt he could use one now, I'll ask him when he comes back from the footie.
Re: Slide Rules
Posted: Tue Oct 19, 2010 9:42 pm
by sejintenej
Mine lives in my desk drawer and I've just got it out. I used it for my last two years at CH though it wasn't allowed in exams.
Early this year I got taught how to use a soroban (a form of abacus) by a Japanese specialist teacher - WOW!!!!!
She and a class of her UK primary school pupils have been on TV. Some older ones had moved on from the abacus to anzan (using an imaginary abacus) doing 5 figure by 5 figure multiplication and division in their heads as quickly as it can be done on a calculator. Sorobans seem to cost about a quid (mine is smaller and must be pence) but the schools decided to drop teaching even though her services were free and took an hour a week..
It is so simple and logical but no way can I hope to be as fast as those 10 year olds.
Re: Slide Rules
Posted: Tue Oct 19, 2010 10:31 pm
by Katharine
I've seen Japanese doing that finger calculation, but didn't know its name. I have also seen skilled Chinese using the abacus.
has anybody else heard (or read) reference to slide rules recently?
Re: Slide Rules
Posted: Wed Oct 20, 2010 8:07 am
by englishangel
Husband says 'give me an hour to work it out'.
Re: Slide Rules
Posted: Wed Oct 20, 2010 9:07 am
by sejintenej
Re: Slide Rules
Posted: Wed Oct 20, 2010 9:49 am
by NEILL THE NOTORIOUS
I had only just managed to understand the Slide-rule --- Post CH--when the Calculator arrived.
I think I still have a Slide-rule tucked away somewhere, and also a CIRCULAR version --- which I never DID understand !

Re: Slide Rules
Posted: Wed Oct 20, 2010 3:17 pm
by Kim2s70-77
I learned to use a slide rule at CH - along with the (now obsolete??) log tables. Can't say I've had much use for it since, however.
Re: Slide Rules
Posted: Wed Oct 20, 2010 5:47 pm
by J.R.
Oh, the joys of slide rules and log tables at CH.
Now just about obsolete with scientific calculators readily available !
Re: Slide Rules
Posted: Wed Oct 20, 2010 8:37 pm
by midget
And when the batteries run down and you do not have any spares?
Re: Slide Rules
Posted: Thu Oct 21, 2010 8:39 am
by englishangel
I have the use of several calculators at work and at home and all of them are photo-voltaic and I have never replaced a battery.
Re: Slide Rules
Posted: Thu Oct 21, 2010 12:13 pm
by sejintenej
englishangel wrote:I have the use of several calculators at work and at home and all of them are photo-voltaic and I have never replaced a battery.
They don't always use very much power; mine (a fairly basic Casio Financial) is on (I think) it's third battery. I used it all constantly at work and even now I use it most days though not heavily. I must have bought it in the mid 1970's and it still works fine though it is a little dirty. My son got through photo-voltaic calculators almost monthly

Re: Slide Rules
Posted: Thu Oct 21, 2010 5:50 pm
by englishangel
Ah, but he's a boy!
Re: Slide Rules
Posted: Thu Oct 21, 2010 10:53 pm
by sejintenej
sejintenej wrote:. My son got through photo-voltaic calculators almost monthly

EnglishAngel wrote:
Ah, but he's a boy!
Compared to me, yes, but he already had a PhD and had lectured in the USA and Norway
