1950 Curta Calculator

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  • Опубліковано 20 сер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,3 тис.

  • @JWGinge
    @JWGinge 8 років тому +2365

    It's surprisingly modern looking for something created in the 50's. The logo looks like it could've been thought up yesterday.

    • @cateatsushi3008
      @cateatsushi3008 8 років тому +46

      For real

    • @pikakai
      @pikakai 8 років тому +178

      I agree, it does look very modern for 1950's, rather cool. I bet it looked futuristic and cutting edge at the tine

    • @eelzchannel
      @eelzchannel 8 років тому +109

      +JWGinge At first I thought it was some modern day replica , was surprised to find out that that is what they actually look like

    • @christopantz
      @christopantz 8 років тому +149

      great design is timeless

    • @theoreticalbear3806
      @theoreticalbear3806 8 років тому +10

      +christopantz Perfectly said.

  • @citrus2curtis
    @citrus2curtis 7 років тому +3765

    It's a math grenade

    • @mal2ksc
      @mal2ksc 7 років тому +115

      Don't make me open a can of whoop-math on you. This thing could probably End You Rightly.

    • @redcap1923
      @redcap1923 7 років тому +16

      Citrus2Curtis Fellow Pattern Recognition fan, I see.

    • @tesityr6722
      @tesityr6722 7 років тому +138

      Indeed a weapon of math destruction

    • @manictiger
      @manictiger 6 років тому +18

      When you try to get the square root of seven, it becomes a whitehole generator, that infinitely spits out energy from another universe.
      Grenade almost doesn't even fit the description; more like doomsday weapon.

    • @NinjaSushi2
      @NinjaSushi2 6 років тому +15

      I came for the puns. Arithmetic Grenade or Grenada de Mathematica?

  • @dragoncaretaker94
    @dragoncaretaker94 7 років тому +770

    For something that was made in the 50s, it looks remarkably modern

    • @ultrahevybeat
      @ultrahevybeat 2 роки тому +25

      yeah it looks like some tactical coffee grinder or something

    • @sinisterthoughts2896
      @sinisterthoughts2896 2 роки тому +9

      I think it looks quite period correct. All metal, muted blued steel or phosphate with white numerals, minimalist industrial design, art deco logo.

  • @bobfalk2896
    @bobfalk2896 3 роки тому +94

    In the early 1970's I worked on a US Forest Service land survey crew. Our work was in the remote Sierra mountains of CA and we used a Curta everyday to do our calculations. It was a prized device and we took very good care of it as it saved us so much time as the alternative was hand calculation.

    • @twistedpeanuts6958
      @twistedpeanuts6958 2 роки тому +2

      That sounds like a dream job, I bet you have lots of great stories

    • @someonespadre
      @someonespadre Рік тому +1

      My first boss had used one, he said eventually grit and dirt got in it and it wouldn’t work as well.

    • @someonespadre
      @someonespadre Рік тому +5

      @@twistedpeanuts6958 it’s the best job on earth, I don’t know why more people don’t go into it. It has everything, historical research, searching for old evidence (healed over blazes on bearing trees, marked stones, old pipes, etc), math especially trigonometry, statistics, we fly mapping drones, get paid to hike, etc. it can be strenuous at times. One of my young coworkers was majoring in Civil Engineering but he wasn’t sure that’s what he wanted to do so he went around to all the different engineering departments but they wouldn’t talk to him until he met Dr. Crossfield in Geomatics Engineering (Fresno State University), pulled him into the office and talked him into it, way better than Civil he said.
      My next trip is to the Sequoia NF backcountry, have to locate a corner back there, will involve some cross country hiking. With modern GPS receivers it doesn’t involve so much conventional traversing and triangulation. Needed for surveying some of the boundaries of Mountain Home State Forest.

  • @DreamJM
    @DreamJM 8 років тому +1525

    Dare you to walk into an Airport with it.

    • @Techmoan
      @Techmoan  8 років тому +407

      +Jamie If you walk into an airport just wearing speedos nowadays you get funny looks.

    • @DreamJM
      @DreamJM 8 років тому +30

      Techmoan haha I might try that actually!

    • @Flo-og4ow
      @Flo-og4ow 8 років тому +5

      +Jamie NEEEEEE DIGGAh

    • @TCWordz
      @TCWordz 8 років тому +103

      Cool calculator, Ahmed.

    • @andrzej2501
      @andrzej2501 8 років тому +46

      LOL
      Yeah, those TSA morons would think it's a bomb or grenade...

  • @PointyTailofSatan
    @PointyTailofSatan 8 років тому +1283

    FYI: the inventor was still designing the Curta when he was thrown into a Nazi prison camp. But the Nazis wanted this device badly for use in artillery aiming calculations in the field. So they kept him alive to work on it. He kept screwing up each model on purpose so it didn't work, until the end of the war, when he was liberated. So basically, the Curta saved his life.

    • @Cannibal713
      @Cannibal713 5 років тому +154

      Yea I love that story. The prison commandant promised him that he would make him an honorary Aryan and give one to Hitler once they won the war. Glad he never got one. He wouldn't have appreciated it's brilliance anyway.

    • @Arkew_
      @Arkew_ 5 років тому +3

      Wow

    • @marcelo90z
      @marcelo90z 5 років тому +80

      What a rather ironic story, because "Curta" in Portuguese can mean "short" or "brief", but it increased the lifespan of the inventor

    • @timo1949
      @timo1949 5 років тому +62

      @@marcelo90z Well the inventors name was "Curt", but what's ironic as well is, his last name was "Herzstark", wich translates to "strong heart" or "strong hearted"

    • @el_teodoro
      @el_teodoro 5 років тому +4

      Thats pretty awesome

  • @leisergeist
    @leisergeist 8 років тому +468

    Today, on things I didn't know I needed

  • @moofymoo
    @moofymoo 5 років тому +67

    now, in 2019, we need Adobe Flash Player simulator to run Curta Calculator simulator in browser..

  • @briantaylor9266
    @briantaylor9266 9 років тому +26

    Thanks for the trip down memory lane. The first time I heard of or saw the Curta was when I was in university in the early '70s. We were still using slide rules, but electronic calculators were just becoming affordable for engineering students. One of our professors wanted to give us some context to the developing technologies, and brought in his own Curta to show us.

  • @CB-RADIO-UK
    @CB-RADIO-UK 9 років тому +225

    Never knew they existed. Very clever, really clever in fact. It must be very nice to use.

    • @Techmoan
      @Techmoan  9 років тому +20

      fredintheshed1 It's a joy to use - an utterly brilliant device and it's got quite some weight to it - it feels solid.

    • @ganeshgupta9402
      @ganeshgupta9402 5 років тому

      fredintheshed1

  • @jameswalton5733
    @jameswalton5733 7 років тому +636

    I like how his vintage calculator is more modern than modern day calculators with the matte black finish and how it's perfect for hipsters

    • @404waffles
      @404waffles 7 років тому +56

      hell, even the logo is pretty damn modern

    • @mihaiberbece1998
      @mihaiberbece1998 7 років тому +18

      I wanted to say the same. The design is incredibly up to date. Maybe haircuts from the '50 are not the only trending ones.

    • @Neyas33
      @Neyas33 7 років тому +30

      That's probably because it's a high end product in the first place. Being in metal (looks like steel) require surface treatment if you want your product to pass the test of time

    • @jaffachannel
      @jaffachannel 7 років тому +2

      But 50s haircuts are kind of trending tho...

    • @fangadorawolfen6164
      @fangadorawolfen6164 7 років тому +1

      This looks simpler to use then modern calculators; I will take one of these over some of these modern calculators.

  • @nickpetersen5934
    @nickpetersen5934 7 років тому +179

    The first person that figures out how to cheaply reproduce these... Gosh I want one so bad.

    • @XcaptainXobliviousX
      @XcaptainXobliviousX 7 років тому +19

      theres a cheesy 3D printed version floating about, but its bulky due to the high precision tolerances needed to get them working in their original sizes. if you want something other than slightly dodgy plastic, you're pretty much gonna need to get an antique. the systems set up to produce the precision ground components for these things just aren't around anymore, and there's no money in bringing it back, so likely, they never will be. kinda like Bakelite :c (outside of some specific industrial applications apparently)

    • @bobbyberetta4206
      @bobbyberetta4206 7 років тому +43

      Nick Petersen every couple of months I check if there's any repro because damn I want one extremely bad. So instead I wrote Curta on my fishing reel & pretend it's one.

    • @ciananmortem3127
      @ciananmortem3127 7 років тому +7

      Bakelite is still in use, Phenolic Formaldehyde resin is used for some boat propellers and some thermal insulation. Lots of stuff now that I think about it.

    • @einkommentierkanal5111
      @einkommentierkanal5111 7 років тому +4

      Wouls it be tecnically legal to produce and sell these? o.O

    • @TheRealColBosch
      @TheRealColBosch 7 років тому +17

      Sure. The patent is long-expired. You might not be able to sell them under the brand name Curta, not unless you could license the trademark (or if it was abandoned at some point), but reproductions would be perfectly legal...except they'd probably cost about $500-$1000 to even produce.

  • @RobWhittlestone
    @RobWhittlestone 9 років тому +79

    Stunning! I went to school in England between 1967 and 1974 and we learnt how to use mechanical calculators affectionately known as "coffee grinders". In about 1972 we went to a first (Japanese) digital computer with punch card input and cathode ray tube output. Looping was achieved mechanically by a motor driving the punched card up and down.
    Great channel Mat, excellent subjects, camera technique, editing and voice-overs.
    All the best, Rob

    • @Techmoan
      @Techmoan  9 років тому +23

      RobWhittlestone Thanks for the kind words Rob - If we are going down memory lane.....I remember when I started work in 1987 the first company I went to (a large well known financial organisation) still had many of their their client records on punched cards. Each record took up multiple cards and were perhaps a couple of inches deep. These were housed in little drawers in hundreds of filing cabinets that took up an entire warehouse sized floor. I imagine the whole lot would fit on one MicroSD card now.

  • @atranas6018
    @atranas6018 7 років тому +108

    it's amazing what engineers can do back in the days before modern digital computers.

    • @user-nq1wp1so2z
      @user-nq1wp1so2z 7 років тому +37

      they still do, you just can't see it

    • @Felisargyle
      @Felisargyle 6 років тому +5

      Those engineers turned into coders

    • @user-sf5iq2fl1l
      @user-sf5iq2fl1l 6 років тому

      Oh, they keep doing it boy! Check out walking and talking 🤖

    • @billl605
      @billl605 5 років тому

      @@user-nq1wp1so2z Sooo they're watching me?

    • @kasuraga
      @kasuraga 5 років тому

      @Alejandro Galarza washer machines and the like still tend to be pretty simple. The input methods have gotten more complex but the actual functions can all be re wired to be mechanical switches if you know what you're doing.

  • @TheEphemeris
    @TheEphemeris 7 років тому +49

    My grandpa had one of those! Dang, I wonder where that thing went. I always played with it as a child...

    • @joshman9757
      @joshman9757 7 років тому +9

      or if you find it you can use it as a fancy paper weight

    • @billl605
      @billl605 5 років тому

      I doubt if a curta would of liked being a marble.

  • @da5idnz
    @da5idnz 7 років тому +12

    I found out about the Curta via the William Gibson novel, _Pattern Recognition_. Well worth the read. Gibson always brings up interesting things in his books, like the Curta, Bibendum (the Michelin Man), the Buzz Rickson flight jacket, etc.

  • @Techmoan
    @Techmoan  7 років тому +596

    Lately there's been a lot of people asking to see the inside of this. As mentioned in the video this might be the best documented thing ever manufactured...put the word Curta into google and you'll find absolutely everything you could ever possibly want to know about the Curta...there's loads on UA-cam too, here's an example. ua-cam.com/video/loI1Kwed8Pk/v-deo.html
    If you want a poster of the internals - it's here www.vcalc.net/cu.htm

    • @samgobeil3622
      @samgobeil3622 7 років тому +7

      awesome piece of technology

    • @FakieStreams
      @FakieStreams 7 років тому +3

      always something new to me on this channel, good work man, keep showing off neat stuff nobody is aware of! Well, at least more stuff with a cult following, the nixie stuff was cool too.

    • @andregoldenstein698
      @andregoldenstein698 7 років тому +1

      Techmoan You sound quite a bit like MagzTv

    • @SamsCoolStuff
      @SamsCoolStuff 7 років тому +2

      My friend had one and one used it in Algebra, granted he could do it faster in his head.

    • @farhanatashiga3721
      @farhanatashiga3721 7 років тому +6

      Techmoan it looked like a fishing rod.

  • @devonopdendries7722
    @devonopdendries7722 6 років тому +6

    I had the pleasure of experimenting with it, reading the manual and figuring out how it worked. It's amazing how the multiplication and division works. The engineering behind it is absolutely astonishing!

  • @smacman68
    @smacman68 7 років тому +15

    I too am fascinated by complex mechanical things. I have a Rowe AMI jukebox from 1971. It is all electro-mechanical and actually quite complex. It has a row of letters and numbers, so you push D-6 and the 45 record in slot D-6 will play. The mechanical parts are not too bad to work on, but the electrical components are getting hard to find. Vacuum tubes have become scarce and I find myself having to rewire and replace whole sections to use parts that are accessible. It is a labor of love though...

  • @Boemel
    @Boemel 7 років тому +23

    I have a mechanical calculator from 1918, but that one is massive and weighs a ton, this thing looks like a keychain :D

  • @JustaMuteCat
    @JustaMuteCat 2 роки тому +6

    This is so cool! Adam Savage from Tested/Mythbusters posted a video not long ago where he sent two Curtas he owns to a place and they did a CT mapping of it and posted the links to the files generated by the scans for anyone curious about how one looks inside as well.

  • @kiwi9065
    @kiwi9065 4 роки тому +13

    FBI : watcha got there?
    Every Curta Owner : uhh a Calculator.

  • @johnwlamp
    @johnwlamp 7 років тому +2

    I first saw a Curta in 1967, when I was 11. I was amazed. I now have a mod II and as with you, it is one of my prized possessions. Off to "crank out an answer" or two ...

  • @aljonacacio8279
    @aljonacacio8279 5 років тому +9

    Wow! That is so amazing! This is my first time to see a mechanical calculator! Indeed, the inventor is really a genuis

  • @larrylentini5688
    @larrylentini5688 7 років тому +35

    I love the advertisement at 1:11. No click bait, misdirection, flashy gimmicks or hiding the true price. Just a simple description of the product, why you should want it and how to buy one.
    Advertisements today shove themselves in your face and pander to the idiots who are the only ones that pay attention to them anymore.

    • @PutItAway101
      @PutItAway101 7 років тому +23

      Must be nice to make a product that you can be proud of what it actually is, and not have to lie to people to sell it.

    • @fatihyldz2283
      @fatihyldz2283 7 років тому

      what advertisement? ı didnt have any advertisements in this video

    • @larrylentini5688
      @larrylentini5688 7 років тому +2

      Fatih Yıldız The old newspaper ad for the calculator

    • @omegathrone3867
      @omegathrone3867 7 років тому

      Lawrence Lentini

  • @OldAndGettingOlder
    @OldAndGettingOlder 9 років тому +22

    Thanks a lot Techmoan. I saw your Curta video and knew this would be a great gift for my engineer wife. I'm out several hundred dollars thanks to you. She's going to love this baby. Thanks.

    • @Techmoan
      @Techmoan  9 років тому +19

      Stanton Taylor That's a great gift of a truly fascinating gadget. You can always justify it as an investment, the Curta keeps appreciating in value....not that you would ever want to sell it.

    • @beckybricker2873
      @beckybricker2873 3 роки тому

      I have a 1959 modal and can not get it to open help.

  • @Bill_CBR
    @Bill_CBR 9 років тому +1

    This is a very cool device. A few years ago my father gave me his. He was a civil engineer and often did work in the field. He purchased his new back in the early sixties. He used it regularly and it shows signs of use. Classic to the way he is, he still had the original cardboard box and documentation that it came with. I was always fascinated by it as I grew up. Thanks for sharing and bringing back some great memories.

  • @volundrfrey896
    @volundrfrey896 8 років тому +3

    A lot of people commenting on how modern it looks without realising that the modern design language Is largely based on the 50's and early 60's. Modern design is a revival of design from this era, this is why it looks modern. In a few decades we will have translucent plastics again.

  • @jeromesegard5658
    @jeromesegard5658 7 років тому +34

    The machine lokks quite modern

    • @JonatasMonte
      @JonatasMonte 7 років тому +6

      INdeed, I thought that the idea was conceived in 1950 and then he bough a model based on it, NOT that it literally was made in 1950, it really looks like a modern thing.

    • @whatisthis839
      @whatisthis839 7 років тому +3

      Thought the same, looks modern all the way down to the font.

  • @best_protagonist
    @best_protagonist 7 років тому +3

    this is pretty awesome , the fact that it was made in 1950 is amazing how complicated mechanism people could do

    • @clarencegreen3071
      @clarencegreen3071 2 роки тому +1

      Other impressive devices from 50+ years ago are the automatic record changers. The entire mechanism was mechanical. Functions: Lift the stylus and place it on the vinyl record. Sense the end of the record, lift the stylus, and drop the next record. At the end of the last record, lift the stylus, dock the tone arm, and turn the amplifier off.

  • @JaredConnell
    @JaredConnell 9 років тому +1

    Looks so cool for a 60 year old machine, it still looks futuristic after all these years and its still amazingly complex and just an awesome piece of equipment!

  • @7dreams1935
    @7dreams1935 7 років тому +2

    Circa 1962 I was rallying with the local SCCA club and was introduced to the Curta as a computational aid that some of the more well heeled teams used. It was common to see the wife (navigator) cranking the Curta at a timer's stop. These were the teams that drove Alfas, Porsches and Austin Healys. I wanted a Curta but my Corvair budget did not allow.

  • @divyajnana
    @divyajnana 9 років тому +4

    First the "Tefi", now the Curta...never heard of that either!!! What a beautiful compact device. Thanks for the education and video.

    • @Techmoan
      @Techmoan  9 років тому

      divyajnana yes both devices compliment each other well. 1950s tech at its best.

  • @paffycat
    @paffycat 7 років тому +72

    Have fun getting that thing through aircraft security.

    • @notgray88
      @notgray88 4 роки тому +1

      Sir this appears to be a bomb in your bag

  • @arvaneret_329
    @arvaneret_329 2 роки тому +1

    I wish they kept making these Curta calculators, they're cool and beautiful pieces of mechanical engineering (no pun intended).

  • @AsitorCorporation
    @AsitorCorporation 7 років тому +1

    There is nothing quite like moving parts doing the work! Absolutely fascinating how so many mechanisms can be moved in to a hand held device and work so well!

  • @novaman3509
    @novaman3509 7 років тому +304

    You sound like a 27 year old James May.

    • @billrowse2266
      @billrowse2266 7 років тому +3

      NovaMan 350 true that

    • @twayland6186
      @twayland6186 7 років тому +1

      NovaMan 350 lol

    • @couldyoubetender3480
      @couldyoubetender3480 7 років тому +4

      NovaMan 350 i was born on the 27th of may lol

    • @carlenger9707
      @carlenger9707 7 років тому +3

      I know! That's also what I said in my comment! It's ironic because I was watching Top Gear on another tab and this the first time I saw this, and i was like, "Why is James May talking about CALCulATORS?!!"

    • @Richi248
      @Richi248 4 роки тому

      I was thinking the same ahhahaha

  • @taeoh705
    @taeoh705 7 років тому +8

    **bring it to the math test**
    HE'S GOT A GRENADE

  • @averyhuelsbeck3116
    @averyhuelsbeck3116 8 років тому +1

    It is incredibly striking how modern the design looks! An incredible device, thanks for showing it!

  • @jeremyclayton-travis1991
    @jeremyclayton-travis1991 7 років тому +2

    I have several mechanical calculators myself Mat. It started with a Curta 45 years ago when I paid the princely sum of £25 I then moved on to some of the bigger machines and slide rules. I tell people they will be useful when the world goes futt. The same goes for anything mechanical and I still have a peddle sewing machine and lots of hand tools that don't require electricity.

  • @Jerbod2
    @Jerbod2 9 років тому +8

    I had no idea this existed, that's awesome.
    Reminds me somewhat of the enigma machine.

    • @Techmoan
      @Techmoan  9 років тому +1

      Manny Calavera I had the feeling that I was behind the curve on this one and everyone else knew all about the Curta - so I'm happy to be proved wrong.

    • @Jerbod2
      @Jerbod2 9 років тому

      Everyone knows things that other's are less familiar with, nothing you can do about that unless you're some kind of chap with a huge head who consumes every bit of information he can get his hands on.

  • @nickiam_
    @nickiam_ 7 років тому +3

    This thing is just awesome. I can't even realise how hard is to develop it.

  • @DenyTheZeitgeist
    @DenyTheZeitgeist 2 роки тому +2

    That is an absolute beauty. I collect calculators, probably because I’m so bad at math, and the Curta is one I will never have the pleasure of owning. Unless one pops up in a thrift store. It’s design is right up there for me, along with the Eames Lounge Chair and the Alpha SX-70.

  • @gandalfwiz20007
    @gandalfwiz20007 8 років тому +1

    Completely amazed, such a complex device, simple, mechanical, ingenious

  • @user-gf9kx6ko9m
    @user-gf9kx6ko9m 4 роки тому +66

    UA-cam
    2014: No
    2015: No
    2016: No
    2017: No
    2018: No
    2019: Show time

  • @albertomartinsen3357
    @albertomartinsen3357 9 років тому +13

    As you promised, the last one is the most amazing one! Really interesting! Not only your videos are useful, but also instructive about technology history! Thank you for that and for the time you use to make your videos! I really appreciate it! Merry Christmas to you and your family!
    Regards from Norway!

    • @Techmoan
      @Techmoan  9 років тому +2

      Alberto Martinsen There's one more video tomorrow - but this is my favourite thing I'm showing.

    • @micheals1992
      @micheals1992 9 років тому

      Techmoan I saw a documentory about automatons and the writing boy is absolutely amazing! it's unbelievable what they managed to achieve with such limited/complicated technology.

  • @charlie7480
    @charlie7480 7 років тому +1

    Not only do i love how this works.. the build is just astonishing...

  • @harrisoncorey282
    @harrisoncorey282 7 місяців тому

    Always a pleasure visiting this video, the first one I remember watching from your channel nearly 10 years ago now. The best part about your channel is how the format has remained almost identical however, the quality of the video As well as your presentation has done nothing but improved. thanks again for nearly 10 years of entertainment, education, and above all, a right good time.

  • @Tinfoilpain
    @Tinfoilpain 8 років тому +131

    Are you James May in disguise???

    • @MrJason005
      @MrJason005 8 років тому +5

      +Tinfoilpain No he's not, he's argued about this many times.

    • @MammothDzn
      @MammothDzn 8 років тому +2

      +Tinfoilpain Totally the same voice :D

    • @MrJason005
      @MrJason005 8 років тому +4

      ***** I'm Greek and even I can differentiate the accents.

    • @Flo-og4ow
      @Flo-og4ow 8 років тому

      +Tinfoilpain Ne das Max Beker

    • @MyCoolMac
      @MyCoolMac 8 років тому

      +Dominik Placr really isn't..

  • @jameswoodard4304
    @jameswoodard4304 5 років тому +5

    The engineering that went into something like this is amazing. The capabilities of purely mechanical devices always impress me. I wonder what the most complex mechanical device is?

    • @techmage89
      @techmage89 5 років тому +1

      There are some folks trying to build a real implementation of Babbage's analytical engine. Perhaps if they complete it, it may become the most complex mechanical device.

    • @doublehappiness9889
      @doublehappiness9889 2 роки тому

      As far as I'm concerned, it's child resistant screw caps. :D

  • @custardavenger
    @custardavenger 3 роки тому

    There are so many thinks on this channel I really want to own, this is straight to the top of the list.

  • @cougar6578
    @cougar6578 8 років тому

    Appreciate your effort in putting up this video to showcase this rare mechanical calculator.

  • @thaddeusmcgrath
    @thaddeusmcgrath 8 років тому +60

    Is there any way to convert the Curta to a fishing reel, for fishing and calculating in those moments in life you have to do both?

  • @randomnikolay
    @randomnikolay 7 років тому +30

    James May, is that you? :D

    • @chuyax5694
      @chuyax5694 7 років тому +1

      ThePumpkinHead he does sound like james mau

  • @dawnzephyr
    @dawnzephyr 6 років тому +1

    The most fascinating part is how small it is. The early electronic calculators were so bulky, and this little mechanical model could probably fit in your pocket.

  • @thecapone45
    @thecapone45 5 років тому +1

    Looks very modern. Especially that logo

  • @avore_2213
    @avore_2213 7 років тому +28

    Wow, that's way more impressive than today's digital calculators.

  • @vicr123
    @vicr123 7 років тому +118

    What if you divide by zero or take the square root of -1? ;)

    • @dragonpurpuracolocado3643
      @dragonpurpuracolocado3643 7 років тому +99

      To divide in the curta you just do recursive substraction. For example, if you have to divide 10 by 3 you do :
      10 - 3 = 7
      7 - 3 = 4
      4 - 3 = 1
      As you have repeated the substraction 3 times, that is your result 10/3 = 3 with remainder 1 (The last number you could not substract 3). But what happens if you divide 10 by 0?
      10 - 0 = 10
      10 - 0 = 10
      10 - 0 = 10
      ... and so on
      Thats why division by 0 is nosense, so if you try in the curta you will have to spin the wheel forever until the machine or your wrist breaks.
      As for √-1 it is not a natural number so you cant get a result in natural numbers that curta uses.

    • @vicr123
      @vicr123 7 років тому +5

      Oh, so that's how the Curta works. Technically anything divided by 0 I undefined (not infinity) but at least the calculator gives nonsense :)

    • @MattMcIrvin
      @MattMcIrvin 7 років тому +15

      The device doesn't really have a "square root key"--I'm guessing the manual told you to use Newton's iteration using the Curta for the arithmetic (guess the approximate square root, divide the original number by it, find the mean of the guess and the quotient, repeat until the result converges).

    • @vicr123
      @vicr123 7 років тому

      Oh... Ok :)

    • @mfbfreak
      @mfbfreak 6 років тому +4

      ua-cam.com/video/443B6f_4n6k/v-deo.html - a video of an electrically driven mechanical calculator dividing by zero

  • @TheMickvee
    @TheMickvee 7 років тому

    This marvellous machine is even more spectacular, when you realise that the guy who invented it, did so from inside Buchenwald, where he was an inmate. Outstanding!

  • @etmax1
    @etmax1 8 років тому

    I came across the Curta looking for slide rules, They've amazed me ever since, thanks for posting

  • @nickbelanger5225
    @nickbelanger5225 7 років тому +7

    I've always wondered what man could be able to do with mechanics had electricity never been discovered

  • @thomaslangley967
    @thomaslangley967 8 років тому +11

    WOW!!! This is one video I wish I would have never watched! Just last fall at a Church Rummage sale I came across one of these identical to this one...still in its original box...with the instruction booklet! For a mear $8.00 US! And they are going for a Grand! DAMN! LOL

    • @gregistopal
      @gregistopal 7 років тому +1

      Thomas Langley you missed out bro

  • @JD3Gamer
    @JD3Gamer 6 років тому

    What a beautifully complicated device wrapped in a neat little package.

  • @subzeroarctics1299
    @subzeroarctics1299 8 років тому +2

    Wow, that looks amazingly modern for something from the 1950s.

  • @jamesandonian7829
    @jamesandonian7829 7 років тому +21

    someone should make replicas

  • @kamjir8628
    @kamjir8628 4 роки тому +3

    Friend: bro, can use your calculator
    Me: you have activated my trap card

  • @kingzfan2000
    @kingzfan2000 7 років тому

    human ingenuity never ceases to amaze me

  • @PossumMedic
    @PossumMedic 2 роки тому +2

    Grade 6 teacher: "You won't always have a calculator in your pocket!"
    Me: pulls out my Curta 😎😎😎

  • @gfbtfbtfilyfxbtyewqqef
    @gfbtfbtfilyfxbtyewqqef 7 років тому +7

    Looks kinda like a futuristic hand grenade.

  • @MRSTU1210
    @MRSTU1210 7 років тому +4

    I bet Clint from lgr would like one he loves this kind of stuff

  • @SilentGamer-jt8dl
    @SilentGamer-jt8dl 7 років тому

    It's amazing how someone actually came up with the idea and designed that thing

  • @splintmeow4723
    @splintmeow4723 2 роки тому

    People need something like this treasure. One thing that is functional and oozes with with love. Live minimally and care for something small that brings so much joy. Like a pencil, a book, a watch, a tiny bowl. 🥰 like a Japanese Kami, we give so much care for a tiny object that it grows a tiny spirit.

  • @mattat3847
    @mattat3847 7 років тому +49

    What if u divide by 0

    • @joshuamangum6305
      @joshuamangum6305 7 років тому +7

      matty amicaterra I was wondering the same thing. maybe it will break the calculator.

    • @ciananmortem3127
      @ciananmortem3127 7 років тому +16

      Gives you zero

    • @goob8626
      @goob8626 7 років тому

      calculator go boom

    • @lotem2236
      @lotem2236 7 років тому +24

      matty amicaterra the timer inside goes off and a black hole is created

    • @ciananmortem3127
      @ciananmortem3127 7 років тому +7

      No no, I swear it gives you zero. It only goes boom and forms a black hole when you try to find the square root of seven. :p

  • @AryzenI
    @AryzenI 7 років тому +3

    I'm more aligned to digital/electrics, but I must MUST have one of these!

  • @KateInTheCity
    @KateInTheCity 7 років тому +1

    Wow. Thank you for making this video. I have never seen one of these before and I find it absolutely amazing. What an ingenious, beautiful, well-crafted device.

  • @Milkman4279
    @Milkman4279 4 роки тому

    I was in a doctor's waiting room, looking at the magazines, and came across an article about the Curta. I wanted one instantly.
    10 years later, and I still want one.

  • @luisaparodi8571
    @luisaparodi8571 7 років тому +3

    I have one that my father bought back in 1958 in a trip to Europe. I always used to show it to my classmates of the University when studying together in my house, and wait till someone guess what it was. Almost all failed... 😁

  • @karmazynowy_7
    @karmazynowy_7 7 років тому +77

    WTF James May? :D

    • @MistrZIGZAG
      @MistrZIGZAG 7 років тому +10

      sounds exactly like james may

    • @SangheiliSpecOp
      @SangheiliSpecOp 7 років тому +5

      Szymon Kucharski thats the first thing I thought, I actually checked to see if this was James May's channel after I heard his voice

    • @georgenooner
      @georgenooner 7 років тому +1

      Captain Slow :))

    • @derplord1337
      @derplord1337 7 років тому

      Same here :D

    • @SangheiliSpecOp
      @SangheiliSpecOp 7 років тому

      Veiko Soodla :D

  • @StephenBlower
    @StephenBlower 5 років тому

    I love it when you come across something that's old that you know little about. Then you find a plethora of information on the t'internet.

  • @reggievangleason9511
    @reggievangleason9511 2 роки тому

    Acquired my Curta 1 by chance. At a local household goods auction, I discovered it at the bottom of a cardboard box, mixed with a couple cheap strobe flashes, some other small camera-related junk, and a cheap film camera. I put the Curta back in the box, kept my mouth shut, and waited. The box of mixed items was one of the last lots to be auctioned, so few bidders remained. Apparently I was the only one there who knew the Curta’s worth, because the auctioneer was getting no bids. Finally, the auctioneer asked if anyone would take the box for $1. I raised my hand, and bought my Curta for $1. Later resold the cheap camera for $3, so I was money ahead.

  • @tomasinolei8600
    @tomasinolei8600 8 років тому +16

    Your voice sounds like James May??? Am I right?

  • @Famous_Mist
    @Famous_Mist 8 років тому +5

    Amazing, thank you for your videos, I really enjoy them

    • @Techmoan
      @Techmoan  8 років тому

      +Luis Pacheco thanks Luis.

    • @Flo-og4ow
      @Flo-og4ow 8 років тому +1

      +Luis Pacheco Das kann doch nicht dein ernst sein???!"!!!!

    • @Famous_Mist
      @Famous_Mist 8 років тому

      +Florian Voß eu gosto mais é de bolos. ..

    • @Feuermagier1337
      @Feuermagier1337 7 років тому

      Luis Pacheco So, I could get this... or a Titan X.

  • @HuntsmanLegacy
    @HuntsmanLegacy 7 років тому

    Well this is possibly the single coolest thing I've yet to find on this channel--and that's pretty impressive given some of the devices that have been featured.

  • @OtakuUnitedStudio
    @OtakuUnitedStudio 5 років тому

    I can see why this is your most precious collectible. I definitely want one.

  • @pyromaniac1695
    @pyromaniac1695 7 років тому +5

    I didn't know James May had a UA-cam career

    • @midnight142
      @midnight142 7 років тому

      Pyromaniac I know where you're getting at. but James May does have a UA-cam career. Look up for his videos on a channel called Brit Lab.

  • @maksuree
    @maksuree 8 років тому +16

    james may is that you?

  • @Andlekin
    @Andlekin 6 років тому

    I discovered that my father-in-law owns a Type II, and boy is it a pleasure to use. 50+ years later, and it feels like it's brand new. It's obviously not as fast as a simple calculator, but I've never gotten as much satisfaction with running a relatively simple calculation as I have with the Curta.

  • @hughbarton5743
    @hughbarton5743 9 місяців тому

    Although I am not a calculator enthusiast, I remembered these from when I was very young, circa 1963ish.
    I learned about these by being mad for all things automotive,and these were standard kit for what was then the most popular form of auto ralleys. These were called time/speed/ distance ralleys. You had to essentially find the route, and then follow it.
    There were checkpoints where you had to arrive at a very specific time, or you were penalized. You can imagine this was the perfect tool for that!
    PS: since the late 1970's, the sport has become just driving as fast as you can on lousy roads....and drivers and navigators started to get killed....not good for the sport....
    Great job!

  • @EnderShard
    @EnderShard 7 років тому +9

    Those would be awesome in school

    • @jort93z
      @jort93z 7 років тому +8

      we got graphing calculators with a huge touchscreen in school lol. it can render 3d models and has a whole periodic system in it. you can even install games on it xD.

    • @Raguleader
      @Raguleader 7 років тому +24

      Yeah, but can you do arithmetic on it by fiddling and twisting things?

    • @mememan8801
      @mememan8801 4 роки тому

      @@jort93z was it the casio classpad?

  • @that_puffsley_guy
    @that_puffsley_guy 7 років тому +86

    #mathgrenade

    • @Snekki94
      @Snekki94 7 років тому +1

      Riley Wilson #bringthemadness

    • @that_puffsley_guy
      @that_puffsley_guy 7 років тому +6

      #bringthemathness

    • @fatihyldz2283
      @fatihyldz2283 7 років тому +1

      lol good one

    • @Gabrong
      @Gabrong 7 років тому +6

      you throw this one into a room, full of enemy forces and its calculate their fate in a second. the deadliest 'nade ever.

  • @richardpatrick32123
    @richardpatrick32123 7 років тому

    I'm almost Speechless! I find it amazing that such a mechanical device could be designed and Made!

  • @colegilliam2379
    @colegilliam2379 6 років тому +1

    For the 1950's, that external design looks insanely modern.

  • @JohnLeePedimore
    @JohnLeePedimore 7 років тому +5

    He got it cheap because they thought it was a fishing reel.

  • @bartzz666
    @bartzz666 8 років тому +5

    EMP proof calculator.

  • @NoNo-nz2tb
    @NoNo-nz2tb 2 роки тому +1

    POV: You got this in your recommended after 7 years.

  • @Fishhunter2014
    @Fishhunter2014 7 років тому

    Now that's an absolutely fascinating little machine.

  • @tylerwilliams1704
    @tylerwilliams1704 7 років тому +30

    looks like a grinder to me. now my weed gonna be smart.

  • @dutch_blades
    @dutch_blades 7 років тому +14

    Why are these so expensive... :(

    • @JackpodyDK
      @JackpodyDK 7 років тому

      And the materials.

    • @thebravegallade731
      @thebravegallade731 7 років тому

      Mohammad Alawadhi
      they don't make this kind of precision gearing and mechanical components anymore cause its impractical expensive, and we have electronagneys and motors to use.

    • @TassieLorenzo
      @TassieLorenzo 4 роки тому

      Demand exceeds (the limited) supply. Quite usual for vintage items that are no longer in production.

  • @unvergebeneid
    @unvergebeneid 4 роки тому

    It looks like those things must feel really satisfying to use. Amazing craftsmanship!