POWERHOUSE COLLECTION

Gilson A-B circular slide rule

Object No. 2010/1/509

This slide rule is from the collection of calculating instruments assembled by Assoc. Professor Allan Bromley. His collection provides examples of most forms of calculating devices made from the early 18th to the late 20th centuries. Slide rules constitute a substantial proportion of this collection. Over the 19th and much of the 20th centuries the slide rule was the primary instrument for calculation used by many people engaged in the trades and in engineering. Although originally invented in the 17th century, and widely used for gauging (or estimating the quantities of certain products such as alcoholic spirits) it took until around 1850 for the slide rule to become generally popular. However for those engaged in estimating (ie, gauging) various quantities of goods in use in the liquor, building and agriculture trades, and for calculating the excise duty to be paid on these goods, numerous kinds of sliding rules with useful scales were developed. Specialist slide rules of many kinds were developed over the period of their use. In the 20th century many special purpose slide rules were made from various kinds of paper or card, and from light sheet plastics once plastics became a common place in the later part of the century. This Atlas/Binary slide rule is an uncommon variant of the Gilson slide rules. Normally they come either as a double-sided Binary or a double-sided Atlas slide rule, each of which has extra scales on the reverse.

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Summary

Object Statement

Circular slide rule with pouch, instruction booklets and leaflets, Gilson A-B, duplex, multi-cursor, metal / plastic / paper, made by Gilson Slide Rule Co, Stuart, Florida, United States of America, 1940

Physical Description

Slide rule, Gilson A-B, circular, duplex, multi-cursor, a double sided disk of white enamelled metal with a large central bolt that hold two pairs of cursors on either side. One side is called the "Atlas" Slide rule and the other is the "Binary" Slide Rule. It is housed in a leatherette sheath and comes with instruction booklets for both types. Included in an envelope (dated 1953) are leaflets for the two types of slide rules. The Binary Slide rule side has multiple scales from the standard set arrayed around the circle of 63cm circumference (at the outer edge) for greater precision. Scales are: from the outer ring: C, CI (C inverted), A, K, L, LL4, LL3, LL2, LL1, B, and then a set for machinists including scales in mm and 64ths of an inch. The Atlas Side Rule has three scales on it: the outer one is effectively 62cm (20 inches) long, the main one is a long spiral giving a precision equivalent to a straight scale 18.24 metres (60 feet) long, and the inner scale appears to be use for counting rotations around the long coil.

DIMENSIONS

Height

5 mm

Width

230 mm

PRODUCTION

Notes

Mfr: The Gilson Slide Rule Co, Stuart, Florida, USA.

SOURCE

Credit Line

Donated through the Australian Government's Cultural Gifts Program in memory of Associate Professor Allan Bromley, 2010

Acquisition Date

20 January 2010

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