The Museum of HP Calculators

HP Forum Archive 19

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The history of my calculators
Message #1 Posted by SteveH on 18 Feb 2009, 5:08 p.m.

I thought I woud write down a brief history of how I cam to own six HP calculators, as much for my own interest but I also thought it might be of interest here and I would also be delighted to hear about other users’ collections and how they use them. In some ways the story is similar to Peter Klein’s My calculator, my self? article.

I still recall being awe struck when my father came home with a Rockwell Scientific Slide Rule he had bought to use at work. This was truly a thing of wonder - it had red LEDs and it could work out sums! My own first calculator was a Sinclair Cambridge which came in a case that resembled a Star Trek communicator and you could actually see the numbers flicker with the effort of calculating a sine. It was a great toy and I still have it and it still works (something of an achievement for a Sinclair product)

I got my first HP calculator in the summer of 1982 after my first year of studying engineering at the University of Dundee in scotland. My choice of calculator turned out to be prescient as I chose and HP-15C over the HP-11C and the next year’s maths syllabus introduced me to matrix maths and the calculator was a God send. It didn’t avoid having to do the calculations but it was useful to be able to check things. The 15C was equally useful all the way through university and the first couple of years of my working life.

At that point I made one of the strangest decisions ever and decided to sell the 15C because I had started working with digital designs and software and wanted to have base conversions available. This was not a daft move but I chose to buy a TI calculator and really couldn’t get used to it after years of using RPN. It probably wasn’t a bad calculator but I needed to get back to the one true faith . At that point I bought an HP-42S which I have now used for years very happily.

I do think the 42S is a great calculator but there is something fantastic about the form factor of the Voyager series calculators. They are small, pocketable, well laid out and run forever on a set of batteries. I was very lucky and had sold my 15C to a friend and he was quite happy to give it back to me as it was gathering dust at the time. I did highlight to him the silly prices that were being paid on eBay for HP-15C at that time but he very generously returned it to me.

This brings me into the ‘backup’ phase of my collection when I realised that I can only really use HP calculators but don’t like any of the modern models so decided to stock up on a few older models from eBay when something reasonably priced came up. So over the next few years I picked up an HP-41CX (classic design but haven’t ever adapted to the layout of the algebra keys), an HP-16C (niche product) and an HP-28S (let’s just say we don’t get on).

The most recent phase is that I thought I should ‘retire’ the two that I use all the time, the 15C and the 42S and all the backups. Given the amounts of money these things are going for on eBay it seems a little crazy to be using these things at work in an open plan office environment. At least at home I’m insured. The iPhone emulators for the 15C and the 42S are excellent and James Thomson’s PCalc is an excellent all-rounder.

Still, it is nice to have a physical calculator in your desk. So I’ve just picked up an HP-48G off eBay...

      
Re: The history of my calculators
Message #2 Posted by Philippe Lasnier on 18 Feb 2009, 5:24 p.m.,
in response to message #1 by SteveH

Hi Steve,

Actually, what happened to you HP-15C rings a bell with me, although in my case it was with an HP-41CV, and I bought a Casio "computer", and I loved that too (still have it), and I never got the 41CV back...Ok, ok, so maybe not so much the same as you :-) I always regretted selling my 41CV, but there was no way I could afford the bits as a student. Still, forward 24/26 years, and I got an HP-41CX...and another. And another. And a HP-16C (my second purchase). I got a bit mad after that, catching up on many years in the wilderness. What I do is keep my "precious" mint machines at home, and take the slightly beat ones to work. Funny, I don't like the HP-28S so much either...

      
Re: The history of my calculators
Message #3 Posted by bill platt on 18 Feb 2009, 6:42 p.m.,
in response to message #1 by SteveH

Brief history:
1982: 11c
1985: factory replaced 11c from damage
1995: lost 11c on airplane somewhere over tennesee
1995: bought 32sii
1998: destroyed 32sii in fit of anger and bought another
2001: lost 32sii and bought a silver 32sii
2003 or so, thought I should get a backup--discovered HP was dropping
out entirely! Went crazy and started collecting. Now have too many
calculators! (Over 20....I've lost exact count)

To think it started out with an 11c, and that I made it 10 years without any replacement necessary...

Edited: 18 Feb 2009, 9:34 p.m. after one or more responses were posted

            
Re: The history of my calculators
Message #4 Posted by db (martinez, ca.) on 18 Feb 2009, 7:15 p.m.,
in response to message #3 by bill platt

Bill; RE: "1998: destroyed 32sii in fit of anger and bought another"
Were you doing your taxes? That's what i'm doing this rainy day, and i wish i had a casio to throw.

                  
Re: The history of my calculators
Message #5 Posted by bill platt on 18 Feb 2009, 9:33 p.m.,
in response to message #4 by db (martinez, ca.)

:-D

Throw- Away!

                  
Re: The history of my calculators
Message #6 Posted by Joerg Woerner on 19 Feb 2009, 10:41 a.m.,
in response to message #4 by db (martinez, ca.)

Throw this one:

and I catch it!

Regards, Joerg

BTW: How do you tax filing on a RPN calculator? You type the itemized deductions and hit [ENTER]. After 4 numbers the stack is full ;-))

Edited: 19 Feb 2009, 11:24 a.m.


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