(11-30-2017 02:26 PM)pier4r Wrote: [ -> ]- 47 x 41 C/CX/CV . Solid first place with S.Cote having them breed (I cannot explain otherwise).
LOL, I would be rich if that was the case.
As a user, I use 8 x HP-41 (1x 41CLv2, 1x 41CLv3, 2x 41CLv4, 2x 41CLv5 & 2x 41CX-HN) for development and testing purposes.
As a collector things are more complicated, you have to take into account the combination of :
- model type (C, CV, CX),
- hardware generation (Fullnut, Halfnut),
- special version (Blanknut),
- box type (small-1st-gen, small-2nd-gen, small-blanknut, wide-1st-gen, wide-2st-gen, wide-blanknut),
- manuals types (ring binding, perfect binding),
- etc.
.. and that is why I have so many HP-41.
Sylvain
edit: typo
(11-30-2017 02:13 PM)pier4r Wrote: [ -> ] (11-30-2017 03:38 AM)Dave Frederickson Wrote: [ -> ]Also, that the 50g and Prime aren't as popular as you thought they'd be because this is a vintage HP calculator website targeted at HP calculators introduced between 1968 and 1986.
I am not sure how to interpret this passage.
For my perspective it seems like "here we discuss systems sold between 1968 and 1986, the rest is not welcomed". If I am not wrong (and I hope I am), I can accept that you have this view but I don't agree on it. It sounds too much like gate keeping.
That's a very misconstrued interpretation of that statement and not my opinion. It is because of the calculators that HP produced during the "golden years" that brought many of us here (except the Prime people) but the forum topics are not restricted to only those early models.
One shouldn't be surprised that the newer models aren't the most common among the members of a vintage calculator forum. For that matter, I'd like to see the results of the same poll posted in the Prime forum.
(11-30-2017 02:13 PM)pier4r Wrote: [ -> ] (11-30-2017 03:38 AM)Dave Frederickson Wrote: [ -> ] (11-29-2017 11:10 PM)pier4r Wrote: [ -> ]In the meanwhile, where is your list?
Who cares?
Me, statistics and forum history.
Statistical analysis of the calculator ownership among the members was
not how this poll was advertised. My understanding of this poll was to determine which calculators were common, apparently so you could consider showing interest in them.
I believe your methodology is flawed because many people own more than one of a particular model. By your reasoning, if 25 people own a Prime and one person owns 25 41's, then they're equally common, but the Prime is more popular. Shouldn't popularity be a better indication of which models in which to show interest?
Why only working calculators? If someone has a calculator in the process of repair I don't see how that affects the commonality or popularity.
Here's another approach and let's use the 41 as an example.
1. $5000 was recently offered for a rare 41 variant
2. Systemyde created a CPU replacement for the 41 and Diego Diaz created re-programmable modules
3. Angel Martin keeps cranking out new and improved ROM's for the 41
4. SwissMicros created the DM41
5. There's a whole website dedicated to the 41
I don't think these things would have happened if the 41 wasn't extremely common and popular.
SwissMicros has also recreated the Voyager series which I doubt they would've done if it wasn't so common and popular.
Dave
Hello!
(11-30-2017 06:33 PM)Dave Frederickson Wrote: [ -> ]SwissMicros has also recreated the Voyager series which I doubt they would've done if it wasn't so common and popular.
Regarding SwissMicros I would really be curious to know how many units they actually manufacture (and sell). Hundreds per year? Thousands per year? I wouldn't be able to make a guess.
Personally I am not really interested in replica calculators although I think it is a good thing they exist. A bit like with paintings - nothing beats a real Van Gogh on your wall (as if I knew...) but a good copy is a hundred times better than no Van Gogh at all
Regards
Max
NB: As another entry for the poll/statics I list the calculators lying around my table right now, mostly recent aquisitions, mainly from eBay (as there are very few other sources now):
- Ti SR56
- No name Chinese Memory card reader with integrated calculator (as I also like to collect calculators built into other, completely unrelated! things)
- Aristo Unilog
- Ti SR52 (just resurfaced under a heap of ViewMaster Reels which I also happen to collect)
- Ti 89 Titanium (complete with box and everything)
- Ti 83 plus
- Ti Nspire (first generation with those awkward minute alpha keys)
- HP25
- HP35s
- Sharp EL-W506
- Triumph Adler "Lady" (small stylish "ladies" calculator with green VFD display from the late 70ies)
- Elite 5001T
- Rockwell 24RD
- Adler 81S
- Ti BA III
- Privileg "mini-computer" (boxed, I think this one is really rare, the first and only one I have ever seen)
- Faber Castell TR3 (VFD calculator on one side, slide rule on the other)
- Two do-it-yourself calculator kits from China, one already soldered together, the other in parts
(11-30-2017 06:33 PM)Dave Frederickson Wrote: [ -> ]I believe your methodology is flawed because many people own more than one of a particular model. By your reasoning, if 25 people own a Prime and one person owns 25 41's, then they're equally common, but the Prime is more popular. Shouldn't popularity be a better indication of which models in which to show interest?
I agree with that. If we count only owners instead of calculators, so far they are only 13 for the HP 41, less than the HP 50g (22) or the HP Prime (16).
(11-30-2017 06:55 PM)Helix Wrote: [ -> ]If we count only owners instead of calculators, so far they are only 13 for the HP 41, less than the HP 50g (22) or the HP Prime (16).
maybe he needs a wighted mean between owners and calculator owned
I know many people are generally interested in vintage electronics, and more specifically in vintage electronic calculators/computers. I probably am in that category, but on a more practical level, if I think back to my original impetus for trying to find HP calculators on eBay, the most pressing and urgent need that I had to satisfy was to find an RPN scientific calculator! (I only had my 11C at the time and was always worried it would stop working or be misplaced.)
Now, in 2017, we have many more options and my feeling of urgency (and worry!) is considerably less, almost non-existent now, particularly with SwissMicros producing great products (I don't consider them to be recreations or copies of HP products. I think they are much improved modern products that have a heritage linked back to the golden HP years, and in the future SwissMicros probably will be as legendary as how we consider pre-Agilent/pre-Keysight HP nowadays, in the area of RPN calculators, especially the HP-style implementations of RPN).
(PS - regarding virtual 41 software, the best is i41CX on the iPhone/iPad platform. Saying it is the best is an understatement. Even the printer paper and ink color are carefully and accurately done.)
HP:
1x 29C
1x 12C
1x 15C-LE
1x 15C+
1x 28S
1x 48SX
1x 48GX
1x 39gs
1x 40gs
1x 50g
2x 48gii
2x 39gii
1x 35s
1x 20b
1x 30b
1x Prime
Non-HP:
2x WP-34s (one based on 20b and one on 30b)
1x TI-59 w/ printer
1x TI-30 (used for perhaps a year in the mid 70's before getting a 29C)
1x TI-55
1x 41CL (formerly my 41CV purchased c1982)
1x Water-powered novelty 4-banger
Good god!! I think I need professional help....
Here is a list of my electronic calculators, excluding my HP palmtops (95LX, 100LX, 200LX).
Code:
Maker Model Year Made in
Calculated Industries
Qualifier Plus IIIx 3415 2004 China
Casio
fx-82B 1987 Korea
HP
10B 1990 USA
10B 1991 Indonesia
10BII China
12C 1985 USA
12C 1985 USA
12C 1988 USA
12C Platinum 25th Anniv. Ed. 2006 China
15C 1988 USA
17B II 1990 Singapore
17B II 1994 Singapore
17B II 1999 Indonesia
19B II 1994 Indonesia
20S 1991 Singapore
22S 1988 USA
27S 1987 USA
28S 1989 USA
30b 2014 China
32S II 1992 Singapore
39GS (F2223A) 2006 China
48G 1998 Indonesia
48GX 1995 Singapore
48SX 1990 USA
50g Graphing Calculator 2014 China
HP et al
WP 34S 2015 China
Radio Shack
EC-4027 1993 Thailand
Sharp
EL-1500 Japan
EL-506R China
EL-5100 1981 Japan
EL-5103S 1989 Japan
EL-512 1981 Japan
EL-512 1985 Japan
EL-733 1991 Japan
Elsi Mate EL-8024 1977 Japan
PC-1261 1985 Japan
PC-1500A Japan
Simpson Sears
Digi-Matic T-8 41029 1972 Mexico
Stokes Publishing Co.
Intermediate Overhead Calculat 1988 China
Texas Instruments
BA II Plus Professional 2004 China
BA-35 Student Business Analyst 1984 USA
SR-10 1973 Brazil
TI LCD Programmer 1982 USA
TI-1100 1984 Taiwan
TI-1270 1976 USA
TI-30 1977 USA
TI-30X IIS China
TI-5025 1978 USA
TI-5025 1979 USA
TI-55 1978 USA
TI-58C 1981 USA
TI-83 1998 Taiwan
TI-92 1996 Taiwan R.O.C.
Alan
Thanks for asking... I never tallied them before. What a hoot! All of these are operational.
HP
1 x 6S
1 x 8s
1 x 10bII+
1 x 12C (old original)
2 x 15C (1 is LE)
1 x 16C
2 x 19C
1 x 25 (my first! gift from Jim Horn!)
1 x 30b (both are prototypes; 1 has clear front plate)
1 x 30S
1 x 32SII
1 x 33s
2 x 35S (1 is the first one ever shipped; 1 is a "Celebrating 35 years" limited edition)
2 x 39gII (prototypes)
1 x 40gs
3 x 41 (1 C tall key, 1 CX halfnut, 1 CX fullnut)
1 x 45
1 x 48S (2x speed, ROM J)
2 x 48SX (1 ROM D, 1 ROM J)
1 x 48G (ROM K)
2 x 48G+ (ROM R)
2 x 48GX (ROM R)
2 x 49G
3 x 49g+
4 x 50g
1 x 65
3 x 71B
1 x 97
5 x 300S ("Jeoly" prototypes)
1 x 300s+
6 x Prime (4 rev A HW (3 prototypes), 2 rev C HW)
TI
1 x 34
1 x 66
1 x Galaxy 9X
SHARP
1 x EL-509A
1 x EL-E300
1 x OZ-7000 (AKA "Wizard")
CASIO
1 x AQ-810
1 x CFX-9800G
1 x fx-115D
1 x fx-115ES PLUS
1 x fx-115MS
1 x fx-250HA
1 x fx-250HC
1 x fx-300ES
1 x fx-300V
1 x fx-300W
1 x fx-9750G PLUS
1 x fx-991N
CALCULATED INDUSTRIES
1 x ProjectCalc Model 8503
1 x ProjectCalc Model 8510
HANDSPRING
2 x Visor Platinum
PSION
2 x Series 3a
SAMA & ETANI
1 x Circular Slide Rule Model 600-ST
9 x generic calculators
10 x digits (2 AKA "thumbs")
1 x 41CL
1 x 41CV
1 x 41CX
2 x 12C
1 x 16C
and around 75 iPhone calculator apps
As I used to sell calculators when I bought a new one due to lack of money my list is rather short:
49G+
50G
Prime
Thinking back I should have kept my calcs, so it would be more than 25 I think.
Arno
pie4r Wrote:@brickviking
"And my fx-9750GII behaves like a fx-9860gII without a backlight"
This means that I should consider fx-9750gII and fx-9860gII part of the same series? Was not the second with SD card?
Yes, and no. This table of Casio calculators (not quite current any more) might explain things a little better:
- fx-7400gII, really light on features. I haven't seen it here.
- fx-9750gII, sold at a cheaper pricepoint ($149) than the fx-9860gII. This is the only one I can find here where I live.
- fx-9860gII, additional features, and a backlight.
- fx-9860gII SD, the same additional features, a backlight and SD card slot.
- ... Others that I haven't included, as they're not part of the discussion.
I have the fx-9750gII, which can be flashed with the firmware from the bigger brother fx-9860gII, turning it into a fx-9860gII as far as firmware is concerned, only missing the hardware feature of a backlight. It still looks exactly like a fx-9750gII externally.
To make things even more confusing, the 9750gII and the 9860gII came out in two different revisions (and several colour choices), depending upon what SuperH processor was on their respective motherboards. The earlier revisions of both still had the SH-3, but the upgraded revisions of both include the SH-4A processor and can do stuff faster.
At least HP appears to be somewhat consistent.
(Post 137)
I have these:
HP 42S
HP 32SII
HP 35S
2- 12C
1- 15C
1- 15C LE
2- 42S
1- 50G
1- 71B
1- 20b
1- 30b
(11-30-2017 07:51 AM)grsbanks Wrote: [ -> ] (11-30-2017 07:31 AM)Carsen Wrote: [ -> ]That'll be easy. After all, my purchasing power is much weaker than most of you old guys. Especially since I'm currently paying for college. Lol.
Why don't you go for a SwissMicros DM15L? They're easier to come by than an original HP-15C -- in fact their very raison d'ĂȘtre is the rarity of the HP model (Michael's HP-15C gave up the ghost, he couldn't find a replacement so he started a company that makes them). They operate exactly like the HP-15C with a few extras (they run the original HP-15C ROM in an ARM-based emulator), they are much faster, they're reasonably (IMO) priced and built like a tank.
Head on over to http://www.swissmicros.com
Thanks grsbanks!! I have been aware of swissmicros for a while, due to the MOHPC. I think they are amazing making the Voyager series available in such a way!!! I will end up buying one for sure to use it as a "daily driver" and find a HP-15C for collection use. Maybe I can inherit my Dad's 30 year old HP-15C. (99% sure he won't give it up)
On my side of the discussion, Dave Frederickson raises some excellent perspective changing information. My hat's off to you.
One more:
HP-9815
Curious, no one has listed an HP-01.
(12-01-2017 02:41 AM)Craig Bladow Wrote: [ -> ]Curious, no one has listed an HP-01.
I noticed the same thing. Geoff must be flying...
HP
10bii+
10c
11c
12c x 2
15c
15c LE
17bii x 2
21s
27s
30b
32s x 2
32sii
35s
41cv
42s
48g x 2 (daily drivers)
48g+
48sx
50g
95lx
TI
30X iis
35 Plus (my first calculator)
36x Pro
84 Plus CE
89 Titanium x 2
Casio
fx-115es
fx-115es Plus
fx-260 SOLAR
fx-991ex
fx-9860GII
ClassPad 330
Sharp
EL-506G
EL-W516X
WP34s
And a shoebox full of slide rules.
Here is my modest collection, one of each:
HP-35........A hand-me-down from my dad when he bought an HP-45 in 1974.
HP-55........My first calculator purchase, spring 1976, two months before I
................graduated from high school. BTW, I was the first person in my high
................school with a programmable calculator (nerds rule). And, no, a
................calculator on the belt is NOT a chick magnet. :-)
HP-34C......Purchased in 1979, in college (civil engineering), specifically for the
................SOLVE and INTEGRATE functions and because I couldn't afford the
................HP-41C. This is my only non-op HP.
HP-41C......My dad wasn't using this anymore, so he gave it to me about
................20 years ago.
HP-41CX....I had sold my HP-41CV with Time Module and X-Functions to fund
................this purchase.
HP-42S......This wonderful machine has been my daily driver since 1988. 'Nuf said.
HP-48G+...This is a well-built powerhouse, but I am far more comfortable with
................standard RPN than RPL. I also had an HP-48G on loan to my son,
................but it was stolen out of his car. I bought each one new for $25
................because the local office supply store was clearing inventory.
HP-32SII...Another $25 inventory clearance purchase.
HP-10B......I this won in a contest here years ago. This is my only algebraic-only
................calc and my only business calc. Where are the trig function???
HP-35S......I bought this for no particular reason. It sits on my desk at home
................for quick number crunching.
HP-50G......Another purchase for no particular reason. The screen is much nicer
................than all my other calcs, the keyboard feel is OK, but the layout is bad.
................ENTER needs to be where God intended and HP implemented for years,
................which would also allow putting +-x/ in line with the numeric keypad,
................where they belong and not shifted up one row. This one also sits on
................my desk at home for tasks the HP-35S can't handle.
--Fred Lusk