Discrete mathematics | Multiplication

A. W. Faber Model 366

The A. W. Faber Model 366 was an unusual model of slide rule, manufactured in Germany by the A. W. Faber Company around 1909, with scales that followed a system invented by Johannes Schumacher (1858-1930) that used discrete logarithms to calculate products of integers without approximation. The Model 366 is notable for its table of numbers, mapping the numbers 1 to 100 to a permutation of the numbers 0 to 99 in a pattern based on discrete logarithms. The markings on the table are: The slide rule has two scales on each side of the upper edge of the slider marked with the integers 1 to 100 in a different permuted order, evenly spaced apart. The ordering of the numbers on these scales is 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, 27, 54, 7, 14, 28, 56, 11, 22, 44, 88, 75, 49, 98, 95, 89, 77, 53, 5, 10, 20, 40, 80, 59, 17, 34, 68, 35, 70, 39, 78, 55, 9, 18, 36, 72, 43, 86, 71, 41, 82, 63, 25, 50, 100, 99, 97, 93, 85, 69, 37, 74, 47, 94, 87, 73, 45, 90, 79, 57, 13, 26, 52, 3, 6, 12, 24, 48, 96, 91, 81, 61, 21, 42, 84, 67, 33, 66, 31, 62, 23, 46, 92, 83, 65, 29, 58, 15, 30, 60, 19, 38, 76, 51 which corresponds to the to the one given by the number table. There are also two scales on each side of the lower edge of the slider, consisting of the integers 0 to 100 similarly spaced, but in ascending order, with the zero on the lower scales lining up with the 1 on the upper scales. Schumacher's indices are an example of Jacobi indices, generated with p = 101 and g = 2. Schumacher's system of indices correctly generates the desired products, but is not unique: several other similar systems have been created by others, including systems by Ludgate, Remak and Korn. An elaborate system of rules had to be used to compute products of numbers larger than 101. Very few of the Model 366 slide rules remain, with only five known to have survived. (Wikipedia).

A. W. Faber Model 366
Video thumbnail

Luger P08

The Luger was developed from the Borchardt C93 by Georg Luger at the German DWM works. Several variants were produced leading to the Luger P08 model, which was adopted by the German Army in 1908. The P08 fired the 9mm parabellum cartridge. The Luger retains the Borchardt’s jointed arm (o

From playlist Handguns, Rifles and me

Video thumbnail

Borchardt C93 pistol

The Borchardt C93 was probably the first commercially successful semi-automatic pistol. It was designed in Germany by Hugo Borchardt in 1893, and fired a 7.65mm cartridge, also designed by Borchardt. The gun uses a toggle-lock system to lock the breech. When the gun is fired the recoili

From playlist Handguns, Rifles and me

Video thumbnail

Hotchkiss 37mm Revolving Cannon

An animation showing the mechanism of the Hotchkiss 37mm Revolving cannon of 1884. This was used extensively by France, other European nations and the United States as an anti-torpedo boat gun. It was also used extensively on land against troops. It fired an explosive shell of approxima

From playlist Hand powered machine guns

Video thumbnail

1984 IBM System/36 Minicomputer Office System - Computer History Minicomputer - Educational

Travel back to 1984 with this promotional film for IBM’s System/36 mid-range computer. - This vintage historical film, courtesy of Brian Durham (see his Channel https://www.youtube.com/user/bkdurham... shows three different System/36 customers and their experiences. Provided for historical

From playlist Word Processing, Office Automation, Electronic Office Tools

Video thumbnail

Hotchkiss Portable MG

The Hotchkiss Portable MG, also known as the Bénet-Mercié in the USA, was a light machine gun fitted to the Mk 5 tank during the last year of WW1. In tank use it fired the .303 cartridge. Because of the restricted space, the 30 round strip magazine was replaced by a 50 round linked belt.

From playlist Automatic Machine Guns

Video thumbnail

Worst Scale Layout on a Slide Rule? Meet the early Faber Castell 2/82

I describe what might be the worst duplex slide rule scale design ever: the early Faber Castell 2/82.

From playlist All Slide Rule Videos

Video thumbnail

Simon Armitage: 'Mother, Any Distance' Mr Bruff Analysis

Buy my revision guides in paperback on Amazon*: Mr Bruff’s Guide to GCSE English Language https://amzn.to/2GvPrTV Mr Bruff’s Guide to GCSE English Literature https://amzn.to/2POt3V7 AQA English Language Paper 1 Practice Papers https://amzn.to/2XJR4lD Mr Bruff’s Guide to ‘Macbeth’ htt

From playlist AQA 'Love and Relationships' Poetry

Video thumbnail

MG08 Machine Gun

The MG08 was the principal heavy machine gun used by the Germans during World War I. It was a development of Maxim’s 1894 design licensed for manufacturing in Germany. It fired a 7.9mm cartridge at a rate of 500 rounds per minute. The sled mount was the most stable mount ever designed f

From playlist Automatic Machine Guns

Video thumbnail

On negative algebraic K-groups – Moritz Kerz – ICM2018

Algebra Invited Lecture 2.2 On negative algebraic K-groups Moritz Kerz Abstract: We sketch a proof of Weibel’s conjecture on the vanishing of negative algebraic K-groups and we explain an analog of this result for continuous K-theory of non-archimedean algebras. © International Congre

From playlist Algebra

Video thumbnail

Hotchkiss 1914

www.patreon.com/vbbsmyt .The Hotchkiss Model 1914, firing the 8mm Lebel cartridge was the main heavy machine gun used by the French during WW1. The American Expeditionary Force also used the Hotchkiss. Firing rate was over 450 rounds per minute,. Ammunition was supplied on strips of 24 c

From playlist Automatic Machine Guns

Video thumbnail

Luftwaffe BF110 Zerstorer - Battle of Kursk Aug 1943

Bf110 aircraft at the Battle of Kursk.

From playlist WW2 aircrafts

Video thumbnail

Bohr Model (4 of 7) Ionization Energy of Hydrogen

This video explains how to determine the photon wavelength needed to ionize a hydrogen atom. Ionization is described as the complete loss of an electron from an atomic or molecular species. The most common transitions are (1) the Lyman series in which electrons transition to the ground s

From playlist Quantum Mechanics

Video thumbnail

Gatling 1874

An animation of a 10-barrel .45 cal 1874 Gatling gun, with 240 round Broadwell magazine. This gun was sometimes called the Camel gun, after some imaginative advertising. Earlier models of Gatling gun were heavy and difficult to transport across rough terrain. In 1872, Gatling patented a

From playlist Hand powered machine guns

Video thumbnail

How Earth's Rotation Affects Our Oxygen | SciShow News

Oxygen is crucial for life as we know it, but before it could build up in our atmosphere, earth had to slow down. Hosted by: Hank Green SciShow has a spinoff podcast! It's called SciShow Tangents. Check it out at http://www.scishowtangents.org ---------- Support SciShow by becoming a pa

From playlist Uploads

Video thumbnail

Eleonara Cinti: Quantitative stability estimates for fractional inequalities

We present stability results for some functional inequalities (such as the Faber-Krahn and the isocapacitary inequality) in the nonlocal setting. The proof is based on some ideas by Hansen and Nadirashvili (who considered the classical local case) and uses the so-called Caffarelli-Silvestr

From playlist Hausdorff School: Trending Tools

Video thumbnail

W Scales -- Faber Castell 2/83 Style

I describe the usage of the double length W scales which give a 5" slide rule the precision of a 10" and a 10" slide rule the precision of a 20". My apologies for the wacky brightness -- after YouTube killed the video editor, it's a bit harder to work with the raw video.

From playlist All Slide Rule Videos

Video thumbnail

Mr Bruff Meets: Alan Bennett (The History Boys) Part 1 of 2

Buy my revision guides in paperback on Amazon*: Mr Bruff’s Guide to GCSE English Language https://amzn.to/2GvPrTV Mr Bruff’s Guide to GCSE English Literature https://amzn.to/2POt3V7 AQA English Language Paper 1 Practice Papers https://amzn.to/2XJR4lD Mr Bruff’s Guide to ‘Macbeth’ htt

From playlist Interviews: Alan Bennett, Clare Wigfall, Beatrice Garland

Video thumbnail

Announcement of Caltech's 9th President - October 24, 2013

On October 24, 2013, Thomas F. Rosenbaum was named Caltech's 9th President at an announcement ceremony held at the Athenaeum for the Caltech community. Read the announcement: http://www.caltech.edu/content/caltech-names-ninth-president Produced in association with Caltech Academic Media

From playlist Research & Science

Video thumbnail

EEVblog #1244 - Mailbag

More Mailbag! Ohms Per Square Sheet Resistance video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ME4Xe53TMxI Thermocouple Tutorial Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AYblSfpKRUk Forum: https://www.eevblog.com/forum/blog/eevblog-1244-mailbag/ SPOILERS: Mailbag SPAM! Arizona If it smells like ch

From playlist Mailbag

Video thumbnail

THE RAREST BUGATTI - ONLY 1 EVER MADE! | SHAH BUGATTI

Heralded by many as one of the most beautiful and sculpturally dynamic Bugatti Type 57s of all, the 1939 Type 57C by Vanvooren in the collection of the Petersen Automotive Museum would have been bodied in a manner similar to that of most of the other 800 or so Type 57s built between 1934 a

From playlist Petersen Deep Dives

Related pages

Carl Gustav Jacob Jacobi | Slide rule | Canon arithmeticus