Posted on 08/31/2004 10:04:24 AM PDT by PatrickHenry
Astronauts Neil Armstrong and Jerry Ross, along with about 200 other Purdue University alumni, have added their slide rules to a new exhibit at their alma mater that testifies to the past mathematical prowess of these computational devices.
The permanent display, on the first floor of the universitys Potter Engineering Center, houses the pre-digital analytical marvels, some of which were made in the 19th century and range in length from a few inches to seven feet.
"There was a point in time when the slide rule was king," said James Alleman, a professor of civil engineering who began collecting the slide rules from alumni 15 years ago. "During a period of about 400 years, anything anybody built that was of any magnitude would have required a slide rule."
Then, in the early 1970s Hewlett Packard came out with the first commercial calculator, the HP-35, signaling an end to the slide rules dominance in scientific computing.
Purdue alumnus and retired civil engineering professor Robert Miles fondly recalls the calculators debut.
"We bought 10 HP-35s and had six installed in the civil engineering structures lab," said Miles, who helped design the display and paid for its construction. "Those six calculators were mysteriously missing within about two weeks, even though they were chained down."
Although calculators revolutionized the world of computation for engineers, scientists and students, they also introduced a disturbing educational trend.
"Many people who push the buttons on calculators dont really know what the numbers mean, while on a slide rule you had to analyze where the decimal point went, and you had to better understand the mathematics," said Miles, who taught civil engineering at Purdue for 40 years, retiring in 1990. He also holds a bachelors degree and masters degree in civil engineering from Purdue.
"A slide rule gives you an amazing amount of computational ability, and people today dont even remember what these things are capable of doing," Miles said.
Alleman said he began collecting the slide rules out of personal interest and for a display to coincide with civil engineerings centennial celebration in 1987. The new glass-enclosed wall exhibit includes slide rules from four astronauts who are Purdue alumni: Armstrong, the first man to walk on the moon; Ross, who has logged more space-walking hours than any other astronaut; Richard Covey and Roy Bridges. Eugene Cernan, the last man to walk on the moon and also a Purdue alumnus, has promised to send his slide rule, as well.
"There are a lot of human stories here," Alleman said. "If these slide rules could talk because of all the alumni who donated these things I am sure they would each tell remarkable stories about projects they were used on."
The display, which is roughly 6 feet high and 12 feet long, "is sort of a history of slide rules," he said.
"Our gigantic 7-foot-long slide rules really catch your eye, and then as you get up close the display kind of pulls you in with the story that it tells," Alleman said.
The exhibit is arranged in a series of panels about the history of slide rules, recounting how English scientists developed the devices. It all began in 1614, when Scottish mathematician John Napier discovered the logarithm, with which multiplication and division could then be completed using addition and subtraction. Six years later, English mathematician Edmund Gunter created a number line in which the positions of numbers were proportional to their logarithms, and in 1632 fellow countryman William Oughtred used Gunters approach to invent the first slide rule.
The display includes cylindrical slide rules and slide rules made of metal, wood, bamboo, paper and plastic.
The largest slide rules were used in classes to teach students how to use them, Miles said.
"Taking a course to learn how to use a slide rule was mandatory at one time," he said. "And from then on you used it for the rest of your academic career."
Robert Miles, a retired Purdue University civil engineering professor and a Purdue alumnus, left, and James Alleman, a current Purdue civil engineering professor, hold a 7-foot-long slide rule in front of an exhibit they created that contains about 200 of the pre-digital computational devices. The permanent exhibit is on display in the universitys Potter Engineering Center and includes slide rules from astronauts Neil Armstrong and Jerry Ross. (Purdue News Service photo/David Umberger)
A little off-subject, but the fact that Bill Nelson got to ride in the shuttle pisses me off. He's just a dumb lawyer who only got the ride because he was a congressman, and now goes around acting like he was an astronaut who decided to run for public office.
Fast, accurate, good enough for engineering purposes, and right here on the desk--The K&E Deci-Lon
"You know, you used to be real cool when you had strapped on your leather slide rule carrier to your belt..."
Yah, right! It was called "The mark of the geek" when I started college in 1963 as an electronics engineering major.
I still have the slide rule and its leather case, though. Darned if I can remember how to use it now. Oh well. I never became an engineer anyhow.
Only EE's strapped them to their belts.
Real engineers crammed them upside down in a hip pocket.
Yeah, that and the pocket protector with 4 colors of ball-point pen. Real cool.
Those were the days.... :)
The hottest slide rule was made by Pickett. My family was on a limited budget so I had a plastic Sterling when IO was in high school.
The skill was in how you could do a series of operations without jotting down an intermediate result (equivalent to a memory in a calculator). We learned to do algebraic manipulations in our heads so we could do it all in one smooth seemless operation.
Boiler bump!
I wish I still had my old "slip stick". I lost it during a move some years ago.
Next week, I'll show him how we built the Pyramids....
"I wish I still had my old "slip stick". I lost it during a move some years ago."
If you remember the make and model of the thing, you can find one on eBay, and for little money. It won't be yours, but it'll be the same.
Mine was a Pickett aluminum log-log rule. Very nice.
I've still got mine. An A. W. Faber-Castell, made in Germany.
I treasure my late grandfather's slide rule, a fine Keuffel and Esser with leather holster. He was a mining engineer, who worked in the dredging operations in the Panama Canal.
Although "electronic" E6-B's do much more than the circular slide rule version, I vividly remember getting embarrassed one cold January day when the electronic version failed on a check ride.
The slide rule works even when batteries fail.
Thanks. I never thought about that. Good idea.
I confess that I'm old enough to have been a sliderule guy
in college.
By way of curiosity, would anyone know when the last sliderule was manufactured?
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