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Thread: ARISTO WERKE 01068 50 cm. SLIDE RULE

  1. #11
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
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    Western Sydney
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    Quote Originally Posted by Brian Hjelm View Post
    I have an Aristo Werke No. 01068 Studio 50 cm.slide rule in as new condition.

    Unfortunately the instruction book was not with it when I acquired it at a garage sale. This rule has a couple of different scales to others I have.

    Does anyone have an instruction book I can borrow and copy?

    Brian
    Not able to help with an instruction book
    But I did come across this information
    http://www.sphere.bc.ca/test/europea...0-aristo-3.jpg

    http://www.oughtred.org/uksrc-price-list-may06.pdf

    If you read down the page there is a list for an instruction book for an 01068 listed,and at the bottom of the page is a contact address with Pay Pal instructions.
    Hope this helps
    I think I gave my slide rule away about the same time as my abacus

    Wayne

  2. #12
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    Oct 2009
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    Not seen a slide rule for a long time. Bit like vernier callipers. Most people use digital ones now. Still got a analogue one and can read it. Imperial measurement gets you thinking. Was once shown how to use a slide rule, but long forgotten now.
    Cheers Hall

  3. #13
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
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    Brisbane, Inner East.
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    Quote Originally Posted by Hall View Post
    Not seen a slide rule for a long time. Bit like vernier callipers. Most people use digital ones now. Still got a analogue one and can read it. Imperial measurement gets you thinking. Was once shown how to use a slide rule, but long forgotten now.
    Cheers Hall
    I have always regarded vernier calipers as good for a quick but not fully accurate measure. People jumped into digital verniers as they didn't have the skill to read an analogue one quickly or read one at all. I dislike digital verniers because of their instability. I have gone back to the trusty analogue verniers. I note that you now get third world make digital calipers under $10 in the junk shops.

    I can read a normal vernier caliper in not much more than the time most non-tradesmen take to read a digital and no longer have a digital vernier.

    If you want to be right, use a micrometer.
    URSUSMAJOR

  4. #14
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    Dec 2008
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    As an apprentice fitter and turner,I was not allowed to use a vernier. They were considered inaccurate. If someone did manage to use one, the job did not get past inspection as it was usually under or oversize.

  5. #15
    Join Date
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    Quote Originally Posted by blackbuttdisco View Post
    As an apprentice fitter and turner,I was not allowed to use a vernier. They were considered inaccurate. If someone did manage to use one, the job did not get past inspection as it was usually under or oversize.
    Yes, indeed. I was a fitter-machinist and for machine shop or tool room purposes vernier calipers were considerd suitable for a quick measure of limited accuracy.

    I have one that measures in fractions of an inch and it is used regularly to size bolts for which it is damn handy.
    URSUSMAJOR

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