Accession No
5972
Brief Description
Otis King’s Patent Calculator, cylindrical slide rule, model K, used by Brian Harland during the surveys of Svalbard between 1949 and 1993, by Carbic Ltd., 1950 (c)
Origin
England; London W1; 171 Seymour Place
Maker
Carbic Ltd.
Class
calculating
Earliest Date
1950
Latest Date
1950
Inscription Date
Material
metal (chrome); plastic; paper (card, paper)
Dimensions
length 148 mm; diameter 30 mm (box) length 171 mm; width 31 mm; depth 34 mm
Special Collection
Brian Harland collection
Provenance
Donated on or before 06/08/2003.
Inscription
‘MADE IN
ENGLAND' (on top of instrument)
'N3978’ (bottom of instrument)
'421 [in pencil]
Otis King's
calculator
Model "K"
No. N3978' (on box label)
'Otis King's
Patent CALCULATOR’ (on instruction leaflet)
Description Notes
Otis King’s Patent Calculator, cylindrical pocket slide rule with helical scales, model K, by Carbic Ltd., c. 1950.
Chrome plated cylindrical handle surmounted by cylinder with helical varnished white paper scale. Cylindrical draw tube with similar scale and metal cursor with indices at top and bottom. Knurled chrome plated top.
Black covered cardboard box with red label and instruction leaflet.
Condition good; complete
References
Events
Description
Developed during the seventeenth century, the modern slide rule is based upon the design by William Oughtred (circa 1630). It is one of many calculation devices that is based on the logarithmic scale, a calculation method invented in 1614 by John Napier.
Before the rise of the pocket electronic calculator in the 1970s, the slide rule was the most common tool for calculation used in science and engineering. It was used for multiplication and division, and in some cases also for ‘scientific’ functions like trigonometry, roots and logs, but not usually for addition and subtraction.
A logarithm transforms the operations of multiplication and division to addition and subtraction according to the rules log(xy) = log(x) + log(y) and log(x/y) = log(x) - log(y). The slide rule places movable logarithmic scales side by side so that the logarithms of two numbers can be easily added or subtracted from one another. This much simplifies the alternative process of looking up logs in a table, thus greatly simplifying otherwise challenging multiplications and divisions. To multiply, for example, you place the start of the second scale at the log of the first number you are multiplying, then find the log of the second number you are multiplying on the second scale, and see what number it is next to on the first scale.
Cylindrical slide rules allow calculations to be done that would otherwise require a linear slide rule of many times its length.
FM:46435
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