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Mechanical Calculators: Basic Slide Rule Instructions
Basic Slide Rule Instructions
To multiply two numbers on a typical slide rule, the user set
the left index (start of the scale) on the C scale to line up
with one factor on the D scale. (All labels refer to Pickett
scales. Scale labels were not completely uniform between brands.)
The user then found the second factor on the C scale and looked
on the D scale for the product. By doing this, the user
effectively added the logs (lengths) of the two numbers and
looked up the antilog.
Multiplications with more than a single digit were carried out
by making use of the smaller graduations to represent additional
digits of decreasing significance. The precision available to the
user was directly proportional to the size of the device (or the
smallest lines the user could resolve.) The slide rule did not
indicate the decimal point. That was done by the user - typically
by estimation, "common sense" or by computing the
characteristic. For example:

Here the result is 7 - estimation of 10x40 and 20x40 makes it
obvious that the result is 700. In actuality, the answer is
700.52.
Division was performed by reversing the multiplication steps
(setting the divisor on the C scale opposite the dividend on the
D scale and reading the result of the D scale under the C scale
index.) To multiply multiple numbers, the user simply moved the C
index to the previous product to start the next multiplication.
(The hairline was handy for keeping a pointer on the previous
product while moving the slide.)
There were many other scales. Many were for unary functions
which required no sliding. Some common scales were:
- CI and DI: Reciprocals
- These scales were the reciprocal (1/x) of C and D
respectively. The user found the number on C or D and
read the reciprocal on CI or DI respectively. For
example, placing the hairline on 2 on the C scale, the
user could read the reciprocal of 5 (.5) on the CI scale.
Of course, the process is reversible since .2 is the
reciprocal of 5. There were two scales for convenience.
- CF, DF, CIF and DIF: Folded Scales
- These scales were "folded" such that instead of
having 1 at each end and Pi in the middle, they started
at Pi, ran up to 1 in the middle, and then went from 1 to
Pi again on the other end. These scales were used to
avoid resetting the slide when a problem would otherwise
go off the end. For example, if after aligning the index
of C with the first factor on D, the second factor on C
was off scale, then the user could instead find the
second factor on CF and read the result on DF.
- A and B: Square/Square Root
- These were the squares of the D and C scales
respectively. To determine a square root, the user found
the number on A and read the root on D. The process was
reversed to find a square. The A scale was simply a D
scale, reduced to half it's length and printed twice.
(The magic of logarithms again.)

As with C and D, there was one fixed and one moving
square scale. This allowed a square or square root to be
easily included in a chained or combined calculation.
(eg. multiplying by the square or square root of a number
could be done in a single operation.)
The tricky part was determining which side of the A
scale to use. For example, the square root of 1.44 is 1.2
and the square root of 144 is 12 - both of which could be
correctly read from the left side of the A scale.
However, the user needed to read the square root of 14.4
from the right side of the scale to get the correct
answer of ~3.8. The simplest trick was to write the
number in standard form (ie n.nnn x 10^exp) and use the
left side for even powers of 10. (And the resulting
exponent was one half the original exponent.) For odd
powers of ten, the user shifted the decimal one place to
the right and decreased the exponent of ten by one. Then
the user used the right side (and again used one half the
exponent of ten for the resulting exponent.)
- R1 and R2: Square/Square Root
- Whereas A and B where the squares of C and D, some rules
also added R1 and R2 which were the square root of D.
Instead of 2 D scales reduced to half size, the R1 scale
was one half a D scale doubled in size and the R2 scale
was the second half. This allowed significantly greater
precession.
- K: Cube/Cube Root
- This scale was used for cubes or cube roots. To find a
cube root, the user found the number on K and read the
cube root on D. The K scale was simply a D scale shrunk
and repeated three times - and the user needed to
correctly decide which of the three scales to use for any
number. This process was similar to the process used on
the squaring scales.
- L: Common Logarithms
- This scale was used to determine the log (base 10) of a
number. More precisely, it determined the mantissa of the
logarithm and the user determined the characteristic. For
example, placing the hairline on the 2 on the D scale,
and reading from the L scale showed that the mantissa of
the log of 2 is .3. So the log of 2 is .3, the log of 20
is 1.3, the log of 200 is 2.3 etc. The user also had to
remember that when the number was small, the
characteristic became negative but the mantissa remained
positive. So to compute the log of .2, the user added -1
to .3 and the result was -0.7. (The process was reversed
for antilogs.)
Since this scale was used to read the
values of logs, it was not written in log scale
but instead had the values 0 - 1 evenly spaced. It was
the D scale that was logarithmic. In fact the L scale was
the only non-logarithmic scale that was commonly found on
slide rules.
- S: Sines and Cosines
- Since the sin x = cos(90-x) the same scale was easily
used for both sines and cosines. (The angles for both the
cosine and sine were typically printed.) The user read
the angle of the sine or cosine on the S scale (keeping
in mind that sines increased to the left) and
read the result from the D scale.
- Cos S: Sines and Cosines
- A common alternate labeling for the S scale. (See above.)
- T: Tangents and Cotangents
- The T scale was used with C or CI to find tangents and
cotangents. Again, only one scale was needed since tan x
= cot(90-x). Also, since tan x = 1/cot x, a single
position on the T scale could be read as a tangent or
cotangent by looking at C or CI.
- ST: Sines and Tangents for Small Angles
- A single scale for finding sines and tangents for small
angles - typically less than 5.7 degrees. Since sines and
tangents are very close in this region, a single scale
was used for both.
Log-log Slide Rules
Log-log rules were invented in 1815 and had scales
proportional to the log of the log of the number. This allowed
the user to calculate X^Y in a fashion similar to that used for
multiplication. (See above.) Log-log rules can be recognized by
the many scales starting with "LL".
Unlike the multiplication scales, the log-log scales did not
require the user to determine the decimal point. The scales
represented a fairly large range of numbers typically from
0.000045 to 22,000.
To raise a number greater than 1.001 to a power, the LL0 - LL3
scales were used. The four scales represented a continuous range
of numbers typically from 1.001 at the left end of LL0 to about
22,000 at the right end of LL3. To raise the number X to the
power Y, the index of C was set to line up with the number X on
whichever LL scale X appeared on. (Again note that the LL scales
were not floating point.) Then the user found Y on the C scale
and read the result on the same LL scale. Reading the result on
the next higher labeled scale would indicate X^(Y*10). Reading
the result on the next lower labeled scale would indicate
X^(Y/10) and so on.
For example, setting the index of C to align with 1.4 on LL2
and the hairline on 2 of C, the user could read that 1.4^2 is
1.96 on LL2, 1.4^20 is ~840 on LL3, 1.4^.2 is 1.0696 on LL1, and
1.4^.02 is 1.00675 on LL0. (All of these results were read on a
10" rule.) To raise a number less than .999 to a power, the
LL/0 - LL/3 scales were used.
A History Of The Slide Rule
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