Designing a Mechanical Calculator
23 points
4 days ago
| 5 comments
| signoregalilei.com
| HN
beeforpork
3 hours ago
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Maybe have a look at the Curta for inspiration of a mechanical calculator. There's a 3D printable version of it.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j9uRckJLqLk https://wudev.digitaltorque.com/articles/curta-1/

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AmbroseBierce
1 hour ago
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He mentions curta in the fourth paragraph, and also having a simple design as one of the goals.
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donkeybeer
3 hours ago
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Curta is over complicated. I eould rather focus on a design thats easily made with plywood and common wood tools.
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Someone
14 minutes ago
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Complex, but as far as mechanical calculators go AFAIK not over complicated. Or is there a simpler mechanical calculator design that packs the same functionality in such a handy package?
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mkreis
3 hours ago
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Reminds me of the purely mechanical computer Z1 with 16-word floating point memory, Keyboard and punch card reader: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Z1_(computer)

Would be interesting to reconstruct that using a 3D printer... if anyone has too mich time to spare.

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hans_castorp
1 hour ago
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The German Wikipedia page[1] about the Z1 also contains a quote from Kurt Pannke, who Zuse told about his plans for the computer.

"Oh, Mr Zuse, there is absolutely nothing left to invent in the field of calculating machines. But you are a nice young engineer, I'll give you 1,500 Reichsmarks and when you have come up with something, show it to me." (Translated by Deepl)

I like the "640K ought to be enough" vibe of that statement :)

[1] https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Z1_(Rechner)#:~:text=Ach%2C%20...

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orbital-decay
4 hours ago
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There are probably designs that are more print-friendly than gears (rod logic?). I wonder how far you could go with just a 3D printer if you really optimize for the efficiency.
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zokier
3 hours ago
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I feel there is very little calculation going on in the design. To be useful like pascaline you'd need at least some convenient way to input numbers.
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ErroneousBosh
1 hour ago
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This looks like a really fiddly way to re-invent the odometer.
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