<snip>
what? a kit built sinclair scientific?
if it were anyone else you would be dead to me.
but since you are usually a voice of reason around here........ you get a pass.
Well thanks for sparing me What can I say, I was young and full of cum back then and the Sinclair was the only scientific calculator within my price bracket. When that calculator was launched in 1974 it sold as a kit for £49.95 and in today's money that equates to £579
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sinclair_Scientific#Assembly_kit
No, you've misread the pricing:
In January 1975, the kit was available for US$49.95, half the price at the time of introduction a year earlier,[13] and in December 1975 it was available for GB£9.95, less than a quarter of the introductory price.
So that's $49.95USD (£21.90GBP at Jan '74 exchange rates, about £165 in today's money) and then £9.95 by the end of the same year (about £75 in today's money).
Oh No I didn't.. the following is an exert from the other link I also posted. Wikipedia has a typo $ in place of a £.
"Conclusions
The Sinclair Scientific came out in 1974 and was the first single-chip scientific calculator (if you ignore the display driver chips). It was stylishly compact, just 3/4 inch thick. It originally sold for the price of $119.95 or £49.95 and by the end of the year was available as a kit for the amazingly low price of £9.95.
Unfortunately, as calculator prices collapsed, so did Sinclair Radionics' profits, and the company was broken up in 1979 after heavy losses. Clive Sinclair's new company Sinclair Research went on to sell the highly-popular ZX 80 and ZX Spectrum home computers. Clive Sinclair was knighted for his accomplishments in 1983, becoming Sir Clive Sinclair. "
http://files.righto.com/calculator/sinclair_scientific_simulator.html
http://www.vintagecalculators.com/html/sinclair_scientific.html
"US$" in place of "GB£" is rather more than a "typo". Those sources differ, and who knows who copied whom when it came to recording the price.
I had one, also built from a kit, and bought the year they came out. I highly doubt the £50 UK price simply because I know that my father wouldn't have sprung for that, not in a month of Sundays. I still remember him having a fit when the bill from the opticians for a new pair of glasses came in at £60 two years later. No way was he going to voluntarily shell out £50 for something non essential. My father was a stereotypical "thrifty" Northener. I'll see if I can find an old Practical Electronics with an ad for it online - that's almost certainly how I came to get him to buy it for me - and get an accurate price for it from primary sources.
Scratch that, check reference 13 in the Wikipedia article, a US Popular Mechanics advert (Jan 75) with a $49.95USD price on it. So it was dollars, not pounds, and reference 14 is an ad from New Scientist at the end of the year (Dec 75) with the £9.95GBP price clearly shown. So, not typos but verifiable from primary sources. The page at http://files.righto.com/calculator/sinclair_scientific_simulator.html that you've quoted to support the £49.95 price is either wrong, or is referring to the built calculator's retail price not the kit.
Moreover, I can believe my father springing the £9.95 for a Christmas present, just.
Dear me, are you needing some glasses? It was launched in 1974 @£49.95 (UK) and $139.95 (US) and as a kit @$99.95, ie. 71% of the assembled price. Lets assume that the UK differential is the same, that would make it around £35.36 at launch.
I quote this paragraph from the History section of Wiki article.
The Sinclair Scientific first appeared in a case derived from that of the Sinclair Cambridge, but it was not part of the same range.[5] The initial retail price was GB£49.95 in the UK (equivalent to £478 in 2016), and in the US for US$99.95 as a kit or US$139.95 fully assembled.[6] By July 1976, however, it was possible to purchase one for GB£7[5] (equivalent to £46 in 2016). The price you quoted was @ Jan 1975, after prices of calculators tumbled, probably as a result of Sinclair's entry into that market arena.
This theory seems to be highly likely as this extract from the Wikipedia article tends to both highlight the tumbling prices and the relationship between the prices you quoted by citing the US Popular Mechanics advert (Jan 75) [
red highlight] and the actual launch price which I quoted. It also goes on to further demonstrate the price collapsing even further by December 75 to just £9.95, {
green highlight} less than 25% of its introductory price, back in 74 which is precisely what I quoted, all the evidence is right there in the Wiki article.
Extract from the Wiki article.
"Assembly kit
The assembly kit consisted of eight groups of components, plus a carry case.[13] The build time was advertised as being around three hours, and required a soldering iron and a pair of cutters.[13][14]
In January 1975, the kit was available for US$49.95, half the price at the time of introduction a year earlier,[13]
and in December 1975 it was available for GB£9.95, less than a quarter of the introductory price.[14] "
I was quoting launch prices, yours was a year later, not the same thing at all.