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  #1  
Old 05-14-2006, 12:43 AM
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Wellydeckhand Wellydeckhand is offline
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What is the favourite or best Scientific calculator use by NA and designer?

There are so many brand and type of scientific calculator, err...... I was quite amazed when I need to buy one for design calculation boat. I know we can use almost all calculator, but which are the favourite or best scientific calculator use by N A and yacht designer?

If you got a picture and some detail about it abilities than normal calculator in term of ship work would be a boon.

wellydeckhand
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Old 05-14-2006, 03:00 AM
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Casio grapical calculator is what I would recomend.
It can draw cures and you can store programs on it.
It has both square and cubic root.
With that and a tecnical formula collection you can calculate everything from dopler and turbine effect to resistance in electrical circuts and stabilety off hull's.

I would be suprised if it's no freeware download calculators on twocows.com or something

If you download opera 9 http://www.opera.com/download/get.pl...yes&sub=marine
it contain widgets and there you can chose calculator, but not that advanced yet, but I think it would come when becom more popular.
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Old 05-14-2006, 06:10 AM
SeaSpark SeaSpark is offline
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Calculator

No calculator can match spreadsheet software on a PC.
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Old 05-14-2006, 10:00 AM
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SailDesign SailDesign is offline
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I liked my TI-59 in the 80's, and now use a Hewlett-Packard 20S (regular Algebraic entry, notr RPN). I actually have 2, one at home and one at work, so I don't have to re-think how to use one or the other.
But, as someone said earlier, it vcannot match what you can do on your PC with a spreadsheet, and Rhino has its own built0in calcualtor now...
Steve
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Old 05-14-2006, 10:48 AM
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a nice calculator at
http://www.allersoft.com/allercalc.htm
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Old 05-14-2006, 10:59 AM
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I typically keep three or four math tools handy... here's my favourites.
Hand calculator, carry it everywhere --> Casio fx-991 series
Spreadsheet --> Excel or Quattro
Mathematics suite --> Maple 9.5/10 (really powerful, but really pricey though)
Plus a few little applets like Convert.exe, etc. and sometimes an equation solver like EES.
Not a fan of graphing calculators. They're bulky and complex and expensive, you can't carry them around easily, and when you're at your desk you have a computer handy anyway.
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Old 05-14-2006, 11:08 AM
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Old 05-14-2006, 03:47 PM
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Ti-89
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Old 05-14-2006, 09:32 PM
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I have had a TI-65 Technical Analyst for years.When you don't have a computer and a spreadsheet available it can't be beat. It has all the usual scientific functions plus it has built in conversions from Eng. to Metric, it's got a built in count up timer, and count down timer, and much more. I don't think these are available any more but I'm glad I have one. Other than that If I had to choose I'd get one of the programmable calculators that does graphs and has a cable link to your computer.
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Old 05-14-2006, 11:18 PM
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Wellydeckhand Wellydeckhand is offline
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Yup, HP made some of the best financial calculator, for my calculation of cost and lending from banks.......... a Casio 9000 for graph.

But I was told there is a casio version special for shipyard and designer calculator?

WDH
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  #11  
Old 05-18-2006, 04:24 AM
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HP34C -> HP11C -> HP48GX -> HP49G+
The best is to have an equation solver in which you enter equations with n unknowns, (n-1) known parameters and get a result for the remaining unknow.

Vincent
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  #12  
Old 05-18-2006, 02:55 PM
dougfrolich dougfrolich is offline
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I am addicted to my HP48 GX, had it for 100 years can't imagine life without it.
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  #13  
Old 05-25-2006, 06:59 AM
MikeJohns MikeJohns is offline
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I went through school and my first degree with a slide rule, now I too am utterly addicted to an HP 48GX. Most engineers I know share the HP addiction.
Had mine around 10 years still haven't read all the manual

On a PC I use Excel a lot, but for anything that needs more complex maths I would be lost without Mathcad.
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Old 07-14-2006, 09:43 PM
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Without a doubt...HP48GX. Got me through university physics, calculus etc. and it one of the few items that I always know the location of at all times. It is the only device the I still have the manual for. RPN is superior too.
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  #15  
Old 07-17-2006, 07:02 PM
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HP48GX seconded. I also have a TI-89 and HP49, but the good old HP48 is still my favorite.

My theory is: if you need to do anything more complex than number crunching, use EXCEL, or MATLAB, or anything else PC. Otherwise, the tactile feel of the HP48 makes it simple and intuitive for arithmetic.

-Jon
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