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Old September 12th 03, 01:23 AM
Brian Kelly
 
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" wrote in message news:N918b.415225$YN5.279999@sccrnsc01...
"Mike Coslo" wrote in message
...
Brian Kelly wrote:

I really hate to bust yer bubble again Alun but Smith Charts and all
the rest of the artifact nomograph "solvers" were already stale about
the time you popped out of school. Didja also have a course in slide
rule operations too? I'll bet you did, dinya?


Now ya did it Brian! I will always have a soft spot for slide rules. Of
course they are obsolete,


We never had courses on either slide rule or log tables "operations".
We had to pick 'em up on the fly on our own. Some of the guys learned
to use 'em in high school. During the first couple weeks of class
there were a lotta guys huddled in groups in the cafeteria trying to
figure the things out. I never did learn to use more than maybe 8-10
of the 21 scales on my bamboo Post. That was a NICE slipstick and I
still have it.

but when I got my first slide rule, it took
math out of the abstract and put it in the real world for me.


I never considered that but in looking back you're right.

I was in the last class at our school that was trained in their use. I
kind of miss the engineer's sixshooter on my belt! ;^)


The engineering students' full dress uniform (the physics majors
weren't far behind) also included a pocket protector full of whatever
ya could jam into it, a worn-out rumpled corduroy jacket and a
beat-to-crap briecase . . The uniform definitely differentiated the
engineers from the business administration weenies.

Where d'ya put the batteries in those things anyhow?


- Mike KB3EIA -


Well said! I still have my log tables book (that's logarithms for the young
folks). Remarkably useless now-a-days.


Whatta pain THEY were!!

I worked in the insurance industry and used to enjoy driving young, visiting
actuaries crazy. They would ask a question on the data presented and rather
than bang something out on my computer or programmable calculator (both of
which I used at all times EXCEPT when a newbie actuary was present)


I've pulled that one. I'm waiting for the opportunities to spring it
on a nephew and a grandson.

I'd
whip out my slapstick. As my eyesight become worse, so did the resulting
answers. grin

Paul AB0SI


w3rv