Sinclair Wrist Calculator Explained

Sinclair Wrist Calculator
Designfirm:Sinclair Instrument
Introduced:February 1977
Processor:Mostek MK50321N
Display Type:Light-emitting diode
Display Size:8 digits
Supply:8.1V
Dimensions:47x

The Sinclair Wrist Calculator was a wrist-worn calculator produced by Sinclair Instrument and introduced in 1977.

History

The Wrist Calculator was launched in February 1977 by Sinclair Instrument, a company established in parallel to Sinclair Radionics when the latter started to encounter financial difficulties.[1]

It was only available as a mail-order kit, and cost around .[1] [2] Despite the difficulty in assembling the kit due to the small size of the parts and their variability in specification, 10,000 were sold around the world. 20,000 were exported to the United States, but most went unsold and were returned to Sinclair.[2] It was described as an "utter dud" and "impossible-to-build" by the journal International Design.[3]

Design

The design used 10 keys, with a three-position switch to select the correct function. The switch was held to the left to access the functions to the left above the keys, and to the right to get the functions to the right above the keys. In the centre position it would enter the numbers on the keys.[4]

It used normal algebraic logic, as opposed to the reverse Polish notation employed on some Sinclair calculators.[4]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sinclair Wrist Calculator . vintagecalculators.com . 26 January 2014.
  2. Web site: Sinclair Wrist Calculator . Planet Sinclair . 26 January 2014.
  3. International Design . 2005 . 52 . 5–8 . 105.
  4. Unique full-function 8-digit wrist calculator... available only as a kit . Popular Mechanics . April 1977 . 195.