Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2015/11/03
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Hi Larry, I have to admit to having an E-6B, a gift from one of the kids, shortly before I received two mechanical heart valves, and had to give up flying. I never learned to manipulate it, though that brings to mind a cardboard circular from Exxon that I carried in my flight kit. My kids went off to college in the 70s, and I still have some TI and HP calculators in drawers behind me. I have used an HP 32S for the last 25 years and it is still doing fine by me. I have also "killed" a few old cameras over the years, in search of knowledge of how they worked. Packed away, I have everything from my father-in-law's wooden 8x10 studio camera to a Polaroid SX-70. Jim Nichols Tullahoma, TN USA On 11/3/2015 2:23 PM, Larry Zeitlin via LUG wrote: > Jim, > It is good to see that another old timer recognizes the wonders of > the slide rule. When you used a slide rule you had to partially solve the > problem in your head. The slide rule simply gave you the mantissa, the > significant figures, not the exponent. So you had to have some idea of the > magnitude of the answer. Thus .03 and 300 look alike. The learned ability > to estimate the magnitude of an answer is lost with most modern computing > methods. I often got absurd answers from many of my students who used the > latest electronic calculators. > The slide rule is still the best tool for figuring out proportions. > A circular slide rule was awkward to carry but it never went off the scale > and the length was far greater than the physical dimension. A 6 inch > circular rule is equivalent to an 18 inch linear one. It could be easily > read to three significant figures and a fourth figure could be estimated. > I believe that a number of pilots still use E6B circular slide rules, > reddubbed as ?Aviation Flight Computers.? Again, no batteries needed. > As I said there is a lot of other stuff interred in the bottom > drawers, including 8, yes 8, Leicas ranging from a IIIb to a pair of M3s, > an old digital Leica (rebadged from a Fuji), a Russian imitation of a Nazi > Luftwaffe Leica. a 1927 Leica 1 and a CL. I?m not a collector, just a pack > rat. I bought cheap stuff, Leicas, Robots, Contaxes and Minoxes from old > camera stores and put them back in working condition, although I had the > M3s CLAd by Sherri Krauter. But as I said in a long ago post my kids will > probably discard all the antique cameras, wondering what the old man did > with all that mechanical junk when all photography is digital. > I confess that I gave into the siren song of electronics by buying > one of the first HP 35 calculators for the outrageous sum of $395. It was > replaced with an HP 45 and then an HP 65. All at ever lowering prices. A > couple of years ago I bought a half dozen Chinese made calculators with > far more capability than the HP models. They cost $1 each. I can afford to > throw them away when the batteries die. Digital photography seems to be > following the same route. > Larry Z > > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information >