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Lasico L30-A Electronic Polar Compensating Planimeter Prototype

American History Museum

LASICO Model L30-a Planimeter
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  • LASICO Model L30-a Planimeter
  • LASICO Model L30-a Planimeter
  • LASICO Model L30-a Planimeter
  • LASICO Model L30-a Planimeter
  • LASICO Model L30-a Planimeter

    Object Details

    maker

    Los Angeles Scientific Instrument Company

    Description

    This metal prototype for an electronic polar planimeter has an adjustable 12" tracer arm with lens. The top of the arm is divided to millimeters and numbered from 10 to 24 centimeters. The bottom is marked with a serial number: 45254. The arm slides into a painted metal holder for an electronic measuring unit with a plug. The holder has a vernier for the scale on the tracer arm and is marked: LASICO. The plug attaches to a Series 40 processor with a digital screen for displaying the measurement and a knob for setting the instrument to OFF, A, ACCU, or B. An AC adapter by Calrad, a Taiwanese company, powers the processor.
    An adjustable 10" pole arm fits into the holder at one end and a rectangular painted metal pole weight at the other end. The weight is marked: LASICO (/) U.S.A. The arm is divided to millimeters and numbered by tens from 30 to 60 millimeters. The adjusting part of the arm is marked: LASICO. An additional tracer arm with a point instead of a lens has serial number: 45275. A business card for the designer, who also donated the instrument, an extra lens, and two plastic washers for the lens are inside a black plastic case lined with foam.
    Maximilian Berktold (b. 1929) immigrated from Kempten-Allgäu, West Germany, in 1950 and almost immediately began working for the Los Angeles Scientific Instrument Company. He oversaw design and production of the firm's planimeters, integrators, pantographs, and various optical instruments until Lasico closed in 2008. He developed this prototype around 1970 from the company's model L30 mechanical planimeter, but the final version was sold as model series 40 and 50. These devices cost several hundred dollars.
    An 18-page booklet, "LASICO Instruction Manual [for] Digital Compensating Polar Planimeters," was received with the instrument. It contains the calibration settings for a model L50-E, serial number 65879. For company history, see 2011.0043.01.
    This instrument reached the Smithsonian if 2011.
    Reference: Accession file.

    Location

    Currently not on view

    Credit Line

    Gift of Maxmilian Berktold

    date made

    1970

    ID Number

    2011.0043.03

    accession number

    2011.0043

    catalog number

    2011.0043.03

    Object Name

    planimeter

    Physical Description

    metal (overall material)
    plastic (overall material)
    foam (overall material)
    paper (overall material)

    Measurements

    overall: 7.3 cm x 33 cm x 30 cm; 2 7/8 in x 13 in x 11 13/16 in

    place made

    United States: California, Los Angeles

    See more items in

    Medicine and Science: Mathematics
    Planimeters
    Science & Mathematics

    Data Source

    National Museum of American History

    Subject

    Mathematics
    Engineering
    Invention

    Metadata Usage

    CC0

    Link to Original Record

    https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746ad-3e50-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

    Record ID

    nmah_1402030

    Discover More

    A planimeter drawing a curved shape. An axle with two wheels is connected to a silver ten inch tracer arm

    Polar–Other

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