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Mechanical computer

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An old mechanical computer called a Curta Type II, shown at the National Museum of Computing.

A mechanical computer is a computer made from parts such as levers and gears instead of electronic parts. Common examples are adding machines and mechanical counters. These machines use turning gears to show numbers. They could also do more difficult work like multiplication and division, and some could find square roots.

Mechanical computers can be analog, using smooth parts such as curved plates or slide rules. Others are discrete, using parts like pinwheels and gears. They were most used during World War II. They helped in important tools such as bombsights, including the Norden, and for ship calculations with devices like the US Torpedo Data Computer or the British Admiralty Fire Control Table.

Hamman Manus R mechanical computer, produced in Germany by the DeTeWe company between 1953 and 1959

Even in space, mechanical computers were useful. From Yuri Gagarin’s first spaceflight in 1961 until 2002, every crewed Soviet and Russian spacecraft, including Vostok, Voskhod, and Soyuz, used a special tool called the Globus instrument. This tool showed the Earth’s movement. It used a small terrestrial globe and showed latitude and longitude.

Though mechanical computers were used into the 1960s, they were replaced by digital computers and later by electronic calculators. By the 1980s, they were hardly used anymore. But in 2016, NASA planned to use a mechanical computer for its Automaton Rover for Extreme Environments program. This was meant to work in the tough conditions on Venus.

Examples

Curta Calculator

Here are some interesting mechanical computers from history:

Punch card data processing

Main article: Unit record equipment

Before electronic computers were invented, people used special machines to handle large amounts of information. These machines used punchcards β€” flat cards with holes β€” to store data. Each card held one piece of information. By the late 1800s, these machines could add, subtract, and multiply numbers. They moved the cards through different machines in a planned order. This helped businesses and governments organize data quickly, even before modern computers existed.

Electro-mechanical computers

Harwell Dekatron

Main category: Electro-mechanical computers

Early electrically powered computers used switches and relay logic instead of vacuum tubes or transistors. These machines had many different designs and could perform various tasks, including some that involved special math. Even though later computers were faster, some of these older machines were kept because they were very reliable. Certain models were made in duplicate to check for mistakes, and a few were sold to the public, although many were unique experimental designs.

NameCountryYearRemarks
Automatic Relay ComputerUK1948The Booths, experimental
ARRANetherlands1952experimental
BARKSweden1952experimental
ETL Mark IJapan1952experimental, asynchronous
FACOM-100Japan1954Fujitsu commercial, asynchronous
FACOM-128Japan1956commercial
Harwell computerUK1951later known as WITCH
Harvard Mark IUnited States1944"IBM Automatic Sequence Controlled Calculator"
Harvard Mark IIUSA1947"Aiken Relay Calculator"
IBM SSECUSA1948
Imperial College Computing Engine (ICCE)UK1951Electro-mechanical
Office of Naval Research ONR Relay ComputerUSA19496-bit, drum storage, but electro-mechanical relay ALU based on Atlas, formerly Navy cryptology computer ABEL
OPREMAEast Germany1955Commercial use at Zeiss Optical in Jena
RVM-1Soviet Union1957Nikolay Bessonov, Alexander Kronrod
SAPOCzechoslovakia1957
SimonUSA1950Hobbyist logic demonstrator magazine article
Z2Germany1940Konrad Zuse
Z3Germany1941Zuse
Z4Germany1945Zuse
Z5Germany1953Zuse
Z11Germany1955Zuse, commercial
Bell Labs Model IUSA1940George Stibitz, "Complex Number Calculator", 450 relays and crossbar switches, demonstrated remote access 1940, used until 1948
Bell Labs Model IIUSA1943"Relay Interpolator", used for wartime work, shut down 1962
Bell Labs Model IIIUSA1944"Ballistic Computer", used until 1949
Bell Labs Model IVUSA1945Navy "Mark 22 Error Detector", used until 1961
Bell Labs Model VUSA1946, 1947Two units delivered, general-purpose, built in trigonometric functions, floating-point arithmetic
Bell Labs Model VIUSA1949General purpose, simplified Model V with several enhancements
Unnamed cryptanalysis multiplierUK1937Alan Turing

Related articles

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