| . |
FACIT C1-13 |
| . |
| Datasheet | Years of production: | 1964-1967 | Display type: | Mechanical digital |
| New price: | · | Display color: | N/A | |
| · | · | Display technology: | Mechanical | |
| Size: | 8½"×12"×6" | Display size: | 13 (accumulator) and 8 (counter) digits | |
| Weight: | 12 oz | · | · | |
| · | · | Entry method: | Stepped drum | |
| Batteries: | N/A | Advanced functions: | long division, square roots possible | |
| External power: | N/A | Memory functions: | N/A | |
| I/O: | N/A | · | · | |
| · | · | Programming model: | N/A | |
| Precision: | 13×9×8 digits | Program functions: | N/A | |
| Memories: | N/A | Program display: | N/A | |
| Program steps: | N/A | Program editing: | N/A |
Calculators like this FACIT C1-13 were a ubiquitous sight in
accounting offices around the world in the 1950s and 1960s. My mother, for instance,
remembers using one of these during her brief employment at an accounting firm in Budapest
sometime in the late 1950s (her boss had an electric version! Of course it was the boss
who used her calculator the least often...) I recall spending many an evening playing with
one such calculator in the small administrative office of the resort hotel north of
Budapest where my stepfather was a manager.
Although much larger, these calculators operate on the same principle as the legendary Curta, using a stepped-drum mechanism. Thanks to the movable
carriage, these machines are well suited for multiplication and long division. Although
the method is somewhat cumbersome, it is possible to compute square roots on the C1-13
with reasonable efficiency (I wouldn't want to be doing it all day long, mind you.) The
picture to the right shows the result of one such calculation: I just finished computing
the square root of
.
These mechanical marvels have all but disappeared in recent decades. The last mechanical FACIT calculator was reportedly made in India in 1982. I was fortunate to have been able to acquire a machine in surprisingly good condition, working flawlessly more than three decades after its manufacture.
As these labor-saving machines are replaced in offices around the world by newer labor
saving devices such as accounting software packages and corporate networks, I cannot help
but wonder. Cranking the handle can be a pain in the proverbial posterior, but is it
really that much worse when compared with frustrating network outages, software bugs, and
other mysterious computer problems? Ask your accountant next time what he or she thinks...