Magic Brain: Last Gasp of the Mechanical Calculator

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 20 сер 2024
  • Like what I make? Want fewer sponsorship ad reads? Consider contributing to my Patreon at / ourowndevices
    Manufactured in Japan and sold from the 1950s to the 1970s, the Magic Brain was one of the last popular iterations of the slide calculator or "addiator". Invented in the 17th Century and perfected in the 19th, for over 100 years the addiator was a commonplace tool for performing basic arithmetic, operating on an elegant mechanical implementation of the Method of Complements.
    SOURCES
    americanhistor...
    www.sliderulem...
    www.sliderulem...
    www.sliderulem...
    www.johnwolff.i...
    www.whipplemus...
    www.vintagecalc...
    www.jaapsch.ne...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 284

  • @dwmac2010
    @dwmac2010 11 місяців тому +176

    My grandmother had one of these back around 1960 when I was a boy. I thought it was amazing. Thanks for explaining how it worked.

    • @savage22bolt32
      @savage22bolt32 10 місяців тому +7

      I remember we had one in the 1960's

    • @igorschmidlapp6987
      @igorschmidlapp6987 10 місяців тому

      @@savage22bolt32 I used to play with my Dad's "Magic Brain"...

    • @bennri
      @bennri 9 місяців тому +1

      @@savage22bolt32 I had one in the mid 1960s.

    • @savage22bolt32
      @savage22bolt32 9 місяців тому

      @@bennri you old coot - like me ❤🌞

  • @_CAT-lg4sr
    @_CAT-lg4sr 10 місяців тому +88

    As a school boy in the 1960's, I had one of the very device you demonstrated that my parents gave to me as one of my Christmas presents. The trouble was that my second grade teacher absolutely forbade the use of these devices in class! She likened it to a form of cheating and required all work be shown and done in pencil.
    Oddly enough she taught us how to use an abacus later that year. Not really that much different from one of these marvelous inventions.

    • @miscbits6399
      @miscbits6399 9 місяців тому +10

      I was going to say that these are a flat implementation of abacus operating principles in a more portable form

    • @MattMcIrvin
      @MattMcIrvin 9 місяців тому +4

      @@miscbits6399 The ancient Romans had miniature hand abacuses with sliding beads built into the frame. They could have easily made a Troncet-style adder except that they didn't have a place-value numerical system that would accommodate them.

    • @carmadme
      @carmadme 9 місяців тому +2

      Reminds me at school in the mid 2000s when a teacher said you won't always have a calculator in your pocket
      We all took out our phones

  • @rev.davemoorman3883
    @rev.davemoorman3883 10 місяців тому +102

    I remember a bank that gave away a free "pocket calculator" in the 1970 (when electronic calculators were a couple of hundred dollars). It was a slide calculator - and surprised the recipients! Until seeing this video, I assumed the free calculators were wheel-based (and some were, I am sure). Thanks for showing this.

    • @dieseldragon6756
      @dieseldragon6756 10 місяців тому +6

      🏦 _„Join us and get a _*_Free_*_ pocket calculator!“_ 😀
      ✉ _Customer opens parcel: Sees slide calculator - And a lot of disappointment - Inside._
      I assume you're a Barclays customer too, then? 🏦🇬🇧😉

  • @marshalt
    @marshalt 11 місяців тому +25

    How does this channel not have hundreds of thousands of subs???

    • @TodayIFoundOut
      @TodayIFoundOut 11 місяців тому +7

      He'll get there. Gilles does amazing work. :-)

    • @Monoryable
      @Monoryable 10 місяців тому +1

      A true hidden gem

  • @rohnkd4hct260
    @rohnkd4hct260 9 місяців тому +3

    My mom used one for groceries shopping. I remember playing with it.

  • @michaelcherry8952
    @michaelcherry8952 10 місяців тому +52

    I have an Addiator Duplex (addition and subtraction) from the 1950s (I think) that I use on a regular basis. You can perform calculations quite quickly when you get used to it.
    I also have a couple of miniature (6-inch) pocket slide rules with Addiators built into the back side, made by Faber-Castel. One is a special slide rule for electrical calculations.
    I'm fascinated by these kinds of devices.

  • @johndoyle4723
    @johndoyle4723 11 місяців тому +31

    Thanks, as an Engineer trained in the 1960s we of course used our "guessing stick", AKA, the slide rule, which I suppose was a simple mechanical device, based on logarithmic scales.
    When electronic calculators appeared circa 1970 they were very expensive and I was still faster with a slide rule, but of course nowhere near as accurate. I also lived through using hand punched cards/tape and Fortran.

    • @JerryEricsson
      @JerryEricsson 10 місяців тому +4

      The first pocket calculator I got came with a sports coat that I purchased at the JC Penny store in my home town. I needed it for testifying in court as I was a cop at the time and the courts decided we should not appear in uniform because it gave the jury the impression they should always trust a man in uniform. Boy has that changed now days.

    • @stevenlitvintchouk3131
      @stevenlitvintchouk3131 10 місяців тому +1

      I learned how to program in assembler before I "graduated" to Fortran. But I owned one of these Magic Brain devices too.

    • @glennso47
      @glennso47 9 місяців тому +1

      In the navy in the 1960s I was on a Submarine Tender, a supply ship for submarines,. I worked in a stock room and I was tasked with filling orders from stock. The orders were on punch cards and we were forbidden from folding, spindling or mutilating. Sadly I did that to an order that I filled. I was used as an example a couple days later. 😮

  • @NikolajLepka
    @NikolajLepka 7 місяців тому +2

    it wasn't until you demonstrated how the carry mechanism works with the hook motion I realised just how clever this device is. Amazing piece of engineering!

  • @jacobcowan3599
    @jacobcowan3599 9 місяців тому +13

    Over the course of millennia, we evolved from the abacus to this lovely little device: a pocket abacus with extra guides for ease of use.
    Then in a matter of decades we got electronic calculators that can perform trigonometry in an instant; just a handful of years later, everyone has a pocket function plotter built into their telephones.
    This really puts into perspective just how revolutionary electronics have been in such a minuscule time!

    • @MattMcIrvin
      @MattMcIrvin 9 місяців тому +1

      And if you look inside the processor chip on a microscopic scale, what the machine is doing is essentially abacus operations with electric charge, though in binary rather than decimal.

    • @adorp
      @adorp 8 днів тому

      But what about the slide rule, and the Curta?

  • @GeoffRiley
    @GeoffRiley 10 місяців тому +5

    I remember having one of those operating in pounds, shillings, and pence. It was an ingenious device that was surprisingly quick to use.

    • @dieseldragon6756
      @dieseldragon6756 10 місяців тому +3

      Given the difficulty of making modern computers understand £sd: If we do reverse decimalisation - Which would be very on-brand for our present Conservative government - We're probably going to have to order in a *lot* of these things so folk can work out what the bally-'eck a _Shilling_ is! 💷🇬🇧😉

  • @GatorGirl
    @GatorGirl 9 місяців тому +8

    Oh man, I had one of those Magic Brain calculators when I was a kid in the early '70s. I remember I had a lot of fun with this until my parents got me an electronic calculator. I liked playing with that as well, more so than with my dolls. I was a weird kid.

  • @refindoazhar1507
    @refindoazhar1507 10 місяців тому +10

    This channel remind me of Technology Connections, from the choice of topic (random everyday stuff of the old days), the way it was presented, the way the room is set up with a bunch of random yet nicely arranged clutters in the background, down to the unusual choice of wearing very formal clothing. Hopefully this channel will be just as successful soon.

  • @dwm1156
    @dwm1156 9 місяців тому +3

    As someone else mentioned, I had a Magic Brain that had a burgundy plastic back. I bought it around 1966 in a toy store I frequented on weekends whenever my paper route showed a profit… so… not really that often, but I spotted the Magic Brain perched in a rack with a dozen others right by the cash register and knew instantly I must have one, after I had bought the thing I had already saved up for, whatever it was, I’ve forgotten, I did. It came in a flimsy and fairly plain white cardboard sleeve with an even flimsier and faint sheet of instructions to operate what I then considered to be my first computer. I could easily out-calculate it up to four or five digits, even at ten years of age, but it was super-useful for serial addition and subtraction - adding and subtracting columns of numbers like credits and debits. My first computer.

  • @billharris6886
    @billharris6886 10 місяців тому +15

    Thank you for doing the history on these ultra simple mechanical adding machines. We had one of those same Magic - Brain Calculators (except in the red plastic body) growing up in the mid 1960's. My dad's career was banking so, a large motorized mechanical adding machine was a regular sight (which made quite the racket when the Total button was pressed). With my interest in math, I was amazed how small and simple these devices were. I did noticed the slides were quite sloppy in movement though but, assumed this was normal. Later, in 1971 I started engineering in high school and the calculating tool of choice was the slide rule. In 1973, the $100 price barrier was broken on 4-function calculators so, within 2 - 3 years scientific calculators obsoleted the slide rules.

  • @ooslum
    @ooslum 10 місяців тому +13

    I had one of these as a kid in the sixties. They could also be used for simple multiplication and division using the addition and subtraction repeatedly and counting the sequence before being left with the remainder. Good video and memories, thanks.

  • @richardvoogd705
    @richardvoogd705 10 місяців тому +6

    Wow, a blast from the past! I had one 52 years ago in 1971!

  • @incub8
    @incub8 10 місяців тому +1

    I have a "Produx Original" with "Made in Germany - West" stamped on the back. It was a gift to me from a very thoughtful friend.

  • @agranero6
    @agranero6 11 місяців тому +13

    My father had a Record addiator I played with it without understanding when I was very young. Today I have a Meta, it was a big success when my son brought it to a school fair on a stand of old objects. Incredible how the young got attracted to it and used it without problem the teacher told me.

  • @video99couk
    @video99couk 10 місяців тому +13

    As a kid I got one of these made of plastic and thin metal, around 1975 when I already had a calculator (which still works). I got quite good at basic calculations with it. Lost it somewhere over the years though.

  • @CoopyKat
    @CoopyKat 10 місяців тому +2

    I had one exactly like the one in this video in the early 70s. I loved it! I blew my mind to see this device again for the first time in decades!

    • @ooslum
      @ooslum 10 місяців тому +1

      It's like being 11 years old again, I bought mine from the back of a comic with one of those "Make yourself a genius advert".

    • @CoopyKat
      @CoopyKat 10 місяців тому +1

      @@ooslum Same here! I think I was 11 or 12, but I don't remember where I got it from. It's weird to see something again after half a century (for me).

  • @InssiAjaton
    @InssiAjaton 10 місяців тому +29

    My father had one similar calculator, all stamped metal. He used it for our farm book keeping to the end of his life. Although he had a marvelous ability to do the calculations in his head. I inherited some of the in-head math capability, while my brothers did not, or at least not as well as I did. When our father died, one of my two brothers took over the book keeping. By then I had bought myself a second hand rotary calculator for my studies. Even later I gave that manual rotary one to my brother for his book keeping help, as I had just purchased oneHP-35 electronic pocket calculator that did much more than just the 4 basic operations. I needed logarithms and trigonometric functions in my engineering profession. Besides the adder calculator my father had also a business oriented slide rule. I don't know what my brother did eventually to the Brunsviga mechanical calculator. I know he kept it at least some years after we had sold the farm and he did not need it for the farm book keeping any more. The simple adder almost certainly was discarded already before the farm was sold. Such memories, however, still remain in my otherwise overloaded head 😊.

    • @budgiefriend
      @budgiefriend 10 місяців тому +1

      Thank you for an interesting insight.

  • @losthor1zon
    @losthor1zon 9 місяців тому

    My dad had a couple of these when I was a kid (ca 1970-ish). I never really understood them until now. Thank you!

  • @paulabraham2550
    @paulabraham2550 10 місяців тому +8

    I had a Correntator which was engineered for Imperial weights (oz, lb, cwt etc). Incredibly specific, but in its place, I think, more useful than the simple decimal type. Decimal addition and subtraction are relatively easy to do in your head, but the multiple bases needed for this is a bit brain bending.

  • @mikefochtman7164
    @mikefochtman7164 10 місяців тому +1

    Remember playing around with a 'magic brain' in grade school back in the 60's. A friend had brought it in and we all "ooo"d and "ahhh"d over it. I had long forgotten this until watching your video. Fun walk down an old memory.

  • @TheCatBilbo
    @TheCatBilbo 9 місяців тому +1

    The explanation made my brain ache, but this is such a clever, mechanical device. Never heard of them before but I'm a 80s calculator kid!

  • @SuperNicktendo
    @SuperNicktendo 9 місяців тому

    I was not prepared for that incredible fascinating lesson.

  • @anomonyous
    @anomonyous 9 місяців тому

    Making something complex in a remarkably simple form is far more impressive and the mark of a truly intelligent mind than simply making something complex.

  • @w2tty
    @w2tty 8 місяців тому

    I had one of these. It must have been late 60s or early 70s. I forgot all about it. Thanks for the memories!

  • @tfairfield42
    @tfairfield42 9 місяців тому +2

    My grandfather gave me a little mechanical calculator. He used it often but it still works well. The brand or model is "Curta" and it looks like a pepper mill 😆great little thing though. Also got an "Addometer" that is quite similar, though much longer, and the use of wheels is much more obvious.

    • @WyvernYT
      @WyvernYT 8 місяців тому +1

      The Curta calculator is very well remembered among vintage computer nerds. If you ever run into abacus and slide rule fans, they'll happily talk your ear off about it. I hope you take good care of it.

    • @Zissou42
      @Zissou42 8 місяців тому

      The Curta is far more complicated than this, and by now rare and worth several hundred dollars. Just don't open it up!

  • @DavidKutzler
    @DavidKutzler 10 місяців тому +3

    I remember when I first saw one of these. Around 1962, Mr. Johnson, my sixth grade homeroom teacher pulled one out of his pocket to calculate something. I bought my first electronic "pocket" calculator fifty years ago in 1973. It was a basic, four-function calculator that cost $99, which is over $680 in 2023 dollars.

  • @bgfd1
    @bgfd1 9 місяців тому

    I had one of these when I was a kid in the early 1970’s loved it.

  • @cdlp8131
    @cdlp8131 10 місяців тому

    My mother had one of those (Rectar brand Addiator) and now I keep it with loving care!

  • @KiwiCatherineJemma
    @KiwiCatherineJemma 10 місяців тому +5

    I had one of these (not necessarily "Magic Brain" branded), back in the early 1970's. I was a kid and our relatives in England used to send us presents in occasional parcels in the mail. Often things not easy to get in New Zealand. I had it for quite awhile but lost track of it decades ago. It came with a little stylus, similar to a piece of broken knitting needle, which I think I used after losing the original stylus that came with it.

  • @jasonrodgers9063
    @jasonrodgers9063 9 місяців тому

    I used to have one of those "back in da day". Had totally forgotten until I saw this video!

  • @DaleKingProfile
    @DaleKingProfile 10 місяців тому

    We had one of these in a drawer when I was a kid, which I totally forgot about. I don't think we knew how to use it. Thanks for the trip down memory lane

  • @KarldorisLambley
    @KarldorisLambley 8 місяців тому

    it is always a good day when i learn a new word, thank you for this-
    rabdology (uncountable)
    (arithmetic) The practice of performing arithmetic using Napier's bones.

  • @pauldogon2578
    @pauldogon2578 10 місяців тому +1

    I had one of these in 1974, brilliantly simple, no bobberies required

  • @phyein4815
    @phyein4815 9 місяців тому

    When you opened it up I thought this vid was gonna be about a fake calculator toy, and was genuinely taken aback when I realized you were going to show it could actually calculate. This is a pretty cool little device.

  • @keyboarderror1
    @keyboarderror1 10 місяців тому

    I've got one of those from my grandfather over 40 years ago. I remember him showing me how to use it but I'd long forgotten. Thanks for reminding me.

  • @davannaleah
    @davannaleah 2 місяці тому

    My goodness! I never thought I would ever see one of these again. I bought one off a school friend for $1 when I was 12. Unfortunately it broke after a while and decided to make something that basically worked the same way. I made it out of knitting counters. You know the ones you put on knitting needles to count the number of rows that you knit. What I did was buy 4 of them, they were 2 digits each, and glued them onto a short length of knitting needle. With a bit of practice I could use it to add and subtract up to 8 digits almost as quickly as with your little device.

  • @mikep3226
    @mikep3226 10 місяців тому +1

    I got one of these types of calculators from my father in the mid 60s and used it occasionally until graduating high school in 1973 when he gave me one of the earliest HP35 calculators (he was a TV engineer and through his business connections had a significant discount with HP, as I recall) as a graduation present to take with me to go to MIT.

  • @FlintStryker
    @FlintStryker 9 місяців тому

    I have one of those. Mine’s red. Got it when I was a kid. Now I need to go play with it. It’s in a drawer at work. Wow!

  • @EVERSMAN42
    @EVERSMAN42 11 місяців тому +3

    As always fantastic content. I feel lucky the UA-cam algorithm got me to the great channel, hope others get lucky as well soon. Deserve so many subs

  • @Tech-Relief
    @Tech-Relief 10 місяців тому

    I had one of those as a child, forgot about it until i saw it here. Must be getting old 🙂

  • @svgalene465
    @svgalene465 10 місяців тому

    My grandmother gave me one of those when I was a kid back in the 1960s. I’d forgotten all about it until I saw this video.

  • @markdraper3469
    @markdraper3469 10 місяців тому

    Mine came as an Xmas gift in '63 from the Sunset House at the South Bay Center in Torrance. 'Nuff said for those who remember. Stayed with me 'til the late 80s at least.

  • @vasilis23456
    @vasilis23456 10 місяців тому +2

    It's much easier to understand complements in binary, I never really thought about using them in the decimal system and it's pretty cool.

  • @AbbyNormL
    @AbbyNormL 9 місяців тому +1

    I remember playing with one of these when I was a kid. Didn’t use it much once I started learning how to use a slide rule, which was quickly replace with the wedge shaped Texas Instruments TI-30 calculator. I actually wore to buttons out on a TI-30 while undergoing the Navy’s nuclear power training (lasting almost two years) so I could sit on a submarine and stare at the meters on a reactor plant control panel.

  • @SuperMrHiggins
    @SuperMrHiggins 9 місяців тому

    I love the term Addiator and am going to use it exclusively from now on.

  • @joelmoses2599
    @joelmoses2599 9 місяців тому

    I remember seeing one as a kid. Thanks for the explanation!

  • @fireballxl-5748
    @fireballxl-5748 10 місяців тому

    I owned one of these. Thanks for the memories!

  • @kgblankinship
    @kgblankinship 9 місяців тому

    I had one of these as a kid around 1970. It proved to be very useful for simple arithmetic calculations.

  • @Sebasimionatto
    @Sebasimionatto 3 місяці тому

    My father was accountant and I keep one of this calculator as dad´s ememberance, may be from 50´s.

  • @MrLamchp
    @MrLamchp 10 місяців тому +1

    I saw the thumbnail and realized that I had one as a child. Never figured out how to use it until now.

  • @philiptownsend4026
    @philiptownsend4026 9 місяців тому

    I had one of these, or something very similar,when I was a kid in the early sixties. I had completely forgotten it. It was fun and fitted in my shirt pocket. I think my parents saw it as an educational aid ;-)

  • @dhpbear2
    @dhpbear2 9 місяців тому

    Wow, this brings back memories. I had one these when I growing up in the 1960s! Thanks! I haven't seen it in something like 55 years!

  • @DanielLopez-up6os
    @DanielLopez-up6os 9 місяців тому +1

    I have a similar one of those, Where you do addittion on one side and flip it to the backside to do Subraction.

  • @MarinCipollina
    @MarinCipollina 10 місяців тому +2

    I had one of these as a child in 1967 or so.. It was stamped metal, very cheap, and looked identical to the one used in this presentation.. I remember that part where when adding numbers, one had to continue the stylus movement to click over to the left, moving that column one number, the 'carry over' function in addition.. Lost to the sands of time, I have no idea what happened to it.

  • @stefanbehrendsen330
    @stefanbehrendsen330 6 місяців тому

    Nice! I have the ARITHMA Addiator on my desk at work. You can still find nice examples of them on ebay for $20-$30, but I found mine at a garage sale.

  • @alext8828
    @alext8828 10 місяців тому +3

    A late friend of mine was an architect and used one of these all the time. Mostly to make fun of calculators. He could calculate feet and inches faster than with a calculator and was always up for a race. I don't know what particular one he had but it was silver and a stylus or pen was used to move the tracks. Wonderful things.

    • @dieseldragon6756
      @dieseldragon6756 10 місяців тому +1

      This is a funny thing actually: Living in a country that prefers Imperial but (Up until a few years ago) was obliged to honour Metric, I've found myself working out and learning the decimal conversion factors between Metric and Imperial, and can now mentally convert and run these through a calculator almost instinctively now. 🇬🇧💱🇪🇺
      I guess this is a natural outcome of growing up in an all-Metric world and then suddenly finding your country leaving that trade union which kept it supporting the Metric system for the entirety of your life... 🙃

  • @hoofhearted3567
    @hoofhearted3567 9 місяців тому

    I’ve got one - in perfect condition and works great. Even has the original instructions !👍

  • @danmartens8855
    @danmartens8855 9 місяців тому

    I had this when I was a kid! I totally forgot about this.

  • @colinbuck8687
    @colinbuck8687 10 місяців тому +1

    “That cheapness came at a cost.” Love it.

  • @TaijanDean
    @TaijanDean 3 місяці тому

    I have an 'Exactus' sliding calculator and it is my favourite portable mechanical calculator. The Comptometer would usually take that category but it is a little on the large size to fit in a pocket 😄

  • @LogicalNiko
    @LogicalNiko 9 місяців тому +1

    I remember playing with one of these as a kid. My father used to have calipers, slide rules, mechanical calculators and other similar tools from his college days mainly stored in the drawer where we used to keep bills and such. I don’t know how many of those I probably abused pretending they were spaceships or other random things.

  • @jeffreyyoung4104
    @jeffreyyoung4104 6 місяців тому

    In the late 60s, I had one with the box and instructions. I kept it in the glove box of my mothers 63 Ford Mustang. I used it for math homework, but I don't remember how to divide with it.
    I lost the original, but I recently bought another one!

  • @wintersbattleofbands1144
    @wintersbattleofbands1144 10 місяців тому +3

    Just a grammar correction. The strips are not corrugated (like a wavy potato chip), they're serrated (like a cutting blade).

  • @deltavee2
    @deltavee2 10 місяців тому +2

    Well I've watched a few in quick succession and among many other things I've found it that your work is addictive. Clean, logical and well presented. Glad I subbed an hour ago! Keep it up, Gilles!

  • @michaelmoorrees3585
    @michaelmoorrees3585 9 місяців тому

    I had one of these, as a kid, in the 1960s. It broke, and was tossed, in less than a year.
    Didn't appreciate complements until the 1980s, when using them in digital electronics classes, in college. Some early microprocessors didn't have a subtract instruction, but used 1's complement (inverting), but by adding one, gave you 2's complement, which would give the equivalent of subtraction.
    My first electronic calculator was a TI SR11 (LED), which cost me ~$30, in 1975. It was replaced by a cheap Sharp scientific (LCD) calculator, during college, for ~$20, which had many more functions. I think both could display numbers in scientific notation. Important, if you're taking engineering classes. I think the Bomar Brain cost ~$400, in the early 1970s, which was the first electronic calculator aimed at the consumer market. You could buy a working used car for that money, back then.

  • @stenic2
    @stenic2 10 місяців тому

    I am 57 and I remember I had one of those machines as a kid

  • @marklsimonson
    @marklsimonson 9 місяців тому +1

    I vividly remember the Chadwick model. We had one in our household and I would play with it as a kid, and I'm pretty sure I learned how to make it work. The world used to be full of mechanical things like this when I was young and electronics hadn't yet taken over. If you can get hold of one, you should do a video about the "Digi-Comp I", a simple mechanical "digital computer" from the early sixties made of plastic, metal rods, rubber bands, and cardboard which you could program with plastic pegs.

  • @stevecastro1325
    @stevecastro1325 10 місяців тому

    We had a magic brain calculator when I was growing up; I was always fascinated by its simplicity of operation.

  • @Jack908r
    @Jack908r 9 місяців тому

    Oh wow. I'd forgotten all about these. Had one when I was younger. Also, back then I could use a slide rule for basic math as well. Still have the slide rules. And I remember when my dad brought home from work one of the first mass produced desktop calculators. It was huge and had small tube lights for the numbers. Thanks for the memories.

  • @ManuelBTC21
    @ManuelBTC21 10 місяців тому +1

    Fascinating. This might have a nice application today in teaching low level software developers about twos-complement arithmetic, since that is still the most common way addition is implemented in hardware.

    • @esra_erimez
      @esra_erimez 9 місяців тому

      You beat me to this comment

  • @poubelle_blanche
    @poubelle_blanche 10 місяців тому

    I have one of these, it is awesome. This and some Napier bones taught me math.

  • @xlerb2286
    @xlerb2286 10 місяців тому +2

    I still have one of those in the desk drawer from when I was a kid. It wasn't really of much use but it did work (I still have the stylus too).

    • @joesterling4299
      @joesterling4299 10 місяців тому

      Same here, except mine is in a box in the garage since last time I moved. It was more of a novelty than a useful item, since it fell on my lap from older family years after pocket calculators were already a thing.

  • @Spock910
    @Spock910 9 місяців тому

    I still have mine I got when I was a kid in the 70’s. It’s pack away in storage.

  • @dadw7og116
    @dadw7og116 10 місяців тому

    Cool. My dad had one of these when I was a kid. I remember taking it to school when I was in grade school.

  • @user-it7lf7kk8m
    @user-it7lf7kk8m 5 місяців тому

    I fell into the gap where slide rules usage were no longer being taught and electronic calculators were still not cheap enough for general use. The first i saw was an early adopter who had one of sinclairs strange calculators with its reverse polish notation. We did do a couple of sessions on the mechanical rotary adding machine in primary school, to prepare us for the future😊

  • @harrybarrow6222
    @harrybarrow6222 9 місяців тому

    I have a Magic Brain, and another similar device, the Exactus, which is smaller.
    I am in the UK, and the Exactus is for the old British currency of pounds, shillings and pence:
    12 pence make 1 shilling, 20 shillings make 1 pound.
    A penny could be divided into 4 farthings, and the Exactus handles farthings as well.
    It was exciting to set up 9,999 pounds, 19 shillings, 11 pence and 3 farthings, and then add 1 farthing, propagating carries to make 10,000 pounds.
    For the record, the UK switched to decimal currency in 1971, with the pound divided into 100 new pence (instead of 20 * 12 = 240 old pence).
    I am now 80 years old and I bought these devices to use seriously.
    Back then, electronics was based on vacuum tubes, computers occupied whole rooms and required air conditioning, so home computers were just science fiction, and pocket electronic calculators were fantasy.
    Of course, I also have a couple of slide rules; one very fancy one with lots of different scales, and one that belonged to my father, who was an engineer in the Royal Navy.

  • @RabRabNZ
    @RabRabNZ 11 місяців тому +4

    I just found your channel from this video, and holy moly what a gold mine! Could you do the Curta next? Or Nagra SN?

    • @CanadianMacGyver
      @CanadianMacGyver  11 місяців тому +2

      I actually just acquired a Curta, but I'm going to build up to it by covering over adding machines first. I plan to make it my 100th video :)

  • @paulbalogh4582
    @paulbalogh4582 9 місяців тому

    Wow - I remember, wish I still had mine plus the original Rockwell calculators… Big green numbers & little rubber feet..

  • @philgiglio7922
    @philgiglio7922 10 місяців тому +1

    Now, do a Curta calculator. All analog and would add, subtract, multiply, and divide. They were very popular with rally drivers in TSD rallies.

  • @argusfleibeit1165
    @argusfleibeit1165 9 місяців тому

    One of those showed up at our house, sometime in the 1960s. I think it came from a neighbor who moved away after his wife died. I don't remember any brand name on it, and nobody really used it-- my dad had a mechanical adding machine that he used for his insurance job. I used to fiddle with the "magic brain" one. I don't know when it disappeared from our house. It was kind of fun to play with.

  • @macsnafu
    @macsnafu 10 місяців тому

    I had one of these as a kid in the 1970s. I bought it through a comic book ad. I lost it at some point, but recently found another one at an estate sale. The original one I had was exactly like the model shown in the video, but the one I have now has a more elegant gold and white design, and just says "CALCULATOR" instead of "MAGIC BRAIN CALCULATOR".

  • @inregionecaecorum
    @inregionecaecorum 9 місяців тому

    I had something very similar but even more compact. In fact I still have it, it cost me six shillings and sixpence back in the day. I graduated onto a slide rule in high school and then one of the first texas instrument calculators.

  • @zeniktorres4320
    @zeniktorres4320 9 місяців тому

    Wow this brought back memories. I had same one, used it heaps. I think I still have it. I have one with the calculator and slide rule combined as well.

  • @wmalden
    @wmalden 10 місяців тому +1

    Wow! I forgot that I had one of these in the 1970’s until I saw this video. Memories of days long gone…

  • @PhilRMcGregor
    @PhilRMcGregor 6 місяців тому

    When I was a kid (in the 70's!) we had one of these in a old dresser in the basement. I was too young to understand how it worked, although I was very good at clearing the numbers. Then it got thrown out at some point. I inherited the dresser though.

  • @davidkohler7454
    @davidkohler7454 10 місяців тому

    I still have the one my Grandfather used when I was a youngster. But it is made of green painted metal with a row of rotary dials like a telephone and a row of square box windows at the top that displays the numerals that are entered with the dials. I used to love playing with it back in the 70,s .My Grandfather is probably the reason I have always been fascinated with maths.

  • @adamb89
    @adamb89 9 місяців тому

    I used to have one of those as a kid in the 80's. I preferred using it to a regular calculator, since the fact that it was entirely mechanical made it seem cool and unusual.

  • @CheapCreep
    @CheapCreep 9 місяців тому

    My brain is too smooth to understand your funny words, magic man.

  • @Vid-FX
    @Vid-FX 8 місяців тому

    I always wanted one of these. But my father bought me a Sinclar scientific calculator, beautiful but logical. Where as the mechanical calculator, even now still seems to work by magic.

  • @richlaue
    @richlaue 9 місяців тому

    My father had a mechanical calculator (bought by Bell Labs) that was motorized
    It had 3 sets of pushbuttons to replace these slides.
    You could do, addition, subtraction, multiplecation, division and powers.
    Some problems might take 10+ minutes to calculate, making for some interesting beats.

  • @Elephantine999
    @Elephantine999 3 місяці тому

    You didn't show the coolest part--when you pull the handle on the top to reset the mechanism to all zeros!
    As a child I watched my parents use one of these when paying bills in the 1960s. When I was finally old enough to figure it out and could use it myself it felt like a big accomplishment. They are cool and fun devices.

  • @chap666ish
    @chap666ish 10 місяців тому

    I got one of these in 1975 or '76, in fact I used it at school a few times. In fact I might still have it somewhere in a box in the loft.

  • @1975Loeven
    @1975Loeven 2 місяці тому

    I have one of these in my collection, the "Wizard" version. After watching this video twice, i'm still totally lost of how it works 😀. But it's a fun item in my (mainly electronic) calculator collection.

  • @davidgold5961
    @davidgold5961 8 місяців тому

    Please do a video on the Curta calculator - you will love learning about it.

  • @xeroinfinity
    @xeroinfinity 10 місяців тому

    I have several different types of these old devices. I think mine were from the 50-60s but Ive not looked them up online. Never knew the history of them, thanks for the history lesson!
    Edit- I think my mom used them for crocheting or knitting large items

  • @adamchurvis1
    @adamchurvis1 9 місяців тому

    I had one of these as a kid!