Coo, that's so like a Facit it's amazing Jaap - I've never heard of the Everest before so presumably far less common than the Facit machines. I like the auto clearing of the 1 in the counter for division, that's neat.
It's an honest surprise these machines don't fall apart, and being so vague (without reading the manual) while still working. I do have a very old one but it has more buttons than I can remember too, and that thing weight like 10 kilos, I wonder how heavy this is...
Thank you for your very useful video. I have this machine’s larger brother, the Model maximAR, which operates in exactly the same way. The counter has 9 places, the result register 17, and the input has a capacity of 10 digits. The only refinement the maximAR has over your Z5R is that the output register is split so that the leftmost 9 digits can be preserved if required when the register is cleared. It’s a sort of memory, I suppose.
Thanks for the video, it is very clear and comprehensive. I am Italian and I have recently bought a similar model (Everest z5). You give where to find the user manual? Even a scan would be fine. Thanks.
@@Alinanonymous On a hand-driven machine like this it is not very exciting. You just keep turning the crank subtracting zero, and all that happens is that the counter keeps increasing.
Aside from everything... The sounds this machine produces... I want one just to serve as a stress reliever. So damn pleasant...
This is incredible, thanks for the video! I've never seen this channel before, but I think you've found a new subscriber.
Coo, that's so like a Facit it's amazing Jaap - I've never heard of the Everest before so presumably far less common than the Facit machines. I like the auto clearing of the 1 in the counter for division, that's neat.
It's an honest surprise these machines don't fall apart, and being so vague (without reading the manual) while still working. I do have a very old one but it has more buttons than I can remember too, and that thing weight like 10 kilos, I wonder how heavy this is...
It is about 7kg.
Thank you for your very useful video. I have this machine’s larger brother, the Model maximAR, which operates in exactly the same way. The counter has 9 places, the result register 17, and the input has a capacity of 10 digits. The only refinement the maximAR has over your Z5R is that the output register is split so that the leftmost 9 digits can be preserved if required when the register is cleared. It’s a sort of memory, I suppose.
I tried on my Android device and it works. Thanks buddy.
Thanks for the video, it is very clear and comprehensive. I am Italian and I have recently bought a similar model (Everest z5). You give where to find the user manual? Even a scan would be fine. Thanks.
The German manual is available from rechnerlexicon:
www.rechnerlexikon.de/en/upload/3/36/Everest-Maxim-AR-Z5R_Anleitung.pdf
Really cool
Heyyy Jaap, ik heb zo een zelfde staan en wil die te koop aanbieden.. Heb jij enig idee wat ik ervoor kan vragen??
Cool but can it divide by zero?
It'll probably just explode
I genuinely want to see this now
@@Alinanonymous On a hand-driven machine like this it is not very exciting. You just keep turning the crank subtracting zero, and all that happens is that the counter keeps increasing.
@@jaapsch2 that's super interesting thank you