Comments
                      
 "Mannheim," "Rietz,"
"Darmstadt," and "Stadia"
           The words "Mannheim," 
   "Rietz,"   "Darmstadt," and "Stadia" denote specific arrangements of calculating 
   scales:   
          Mannheim:    A slide rule with scales A [B, C] D and [S, 
  L, T].  (The original Mannheim  slide rule had only A [B, C] D scales 
  but common usage includes trigonometric  and common logarithm scales.) 
  
          Improved    Mannheim Scales: A slide rule with scales A 
  [B, CI, C] D, K and [S,  L, T].  On both Mannheim and Improved Mannheim 
  rules, angles between  0º-34’ and 90o are set on the S scale
  and their sines read  from the A/B scales.  (But note that Hemmi used
  Rietz S scales  on all their Mannheim and improved Mannheim slide
 rules from about 1940 until  about 1955.)  
          Rietz    Scales: K, A [B, C] D, L and [S, S&T, T].  
  Rietz rules may also   have a CI scale.  Angles between 5o44' 
  and 90o   are set on the S scale and their sines read from the 
  C/D scales.  Angles   between 0º-34’ and 5º-44’ are set on
  the S&T scale and their   sines and tangents (which are essentially 
equal  to each other at such small angles) read from  the C/D scales.
          Darmstadt    Scales: L, K, A [B, CI, C] D, COS, Sin, Tg 
  and [LL1, LL2, LL3].  The    Sin scale is in degrees and gives the 
angle  whose sine is shown on the D  scale.  Similarly, the Tg scale 
give the  angle whose tangent is shown   on the D scale. 
          Stadia    Scales: For surveyors.  Click here for explanation  of stadia scales. 
  
                      
 Gauge Marks
           The gauge marks
    most  frequently appearing are 
          π = 3.14,      
          C2 =
4/π  =  1.27,   
          C = √(4/π) = 1.128,      
          Hp = 0.736 kW/hp 
(French/metric)      or 0.746 kW/hp (British/American). 
                      
 Horsepower
           “Electro” and some
  other    slide rules are constructed to provide automatic conversion between
  watts    and horsepower.  Originally the conversion factor was 746
watts  = 1  hp, but starting about 1930, France and other countries changed
to a  “metric”    horsepower of 736 watts, leaving the United States and
Great Britain as  the principal countries still using the old, 746-watt,
horsepower.   After the early 1930s, all rules where the comments mention
“hp” were available     in separate British/US and French/metric versions. 
From the early   1930s to the early 1950s the different versions had different
gauge marks,   different cursors, and a different knife-edge arrangement
for reading scales   in the gutter.  By the middle 50s Hemmi had eliminated
the gauge marks   and knife edge and the only difference between the French/metric
versions   and the British/US versions was in the spacing of hairlines on
the cursor.              
The existence of separate 
     French/metric and British/US hp versions means that there are many possible 
     variants of slide rules with hp gauge marks or cursors.  For example, 
     Hemmi model 80 came in single- (80/1) and triple- (80/3) hairline versions, 
     both with two definitions of horsepower and each of those available with
    at least two different sets of measuring scales on the top and bottom 
edges.      There must be at least eight different variants of 
the Hemmi model     80 slide rule. 
            
                   
 Cursor Hairlines
           Whenever a cursor 
 has   multiple   hairlines, this catalog attempts to give the spacing between 
 the  hairlines.    To understand the notation used consider a hypothetical 
   cursor with two hairlines spaced such that when the left hairline is set 
  to 1.000 on the A scale the right hairline is over 2.00 on the A scale.  
   If this hypothetical cursor were to be reset to put the left hairline on
  2.50 on the A scale, the right hairline would be on 5.00.  Or set the
  left hairline on 4.12 and the right hairline will be on 8.24.  In
every   case the number under the right hairline will be twice the number 
under the  left hairline.  The spacing between the lines on this hypothetical 
cursor   would be indicated by the notation {A: 2}.        
  
A common spacing for 3-line 
     cursors is {A: hp, C2}.  This notation indicates that 
 the    space between the left and center hairlines corresponds to a ratio 
 of 0.736    kW/hp (or 0.746 kW/hp, depending upon which definition of horsepower 
  was   in use in the country where the slide rule was originally sold) and 
  the space  between the center and right hairline corresponds to a ratio 
of  1.27, where  1.27 = 4/π = "C2", measured on
the A scale.   
                   
Another example: “{D: hp-C, 
     C}” indicates that the space between the center and right hairline corresponds 
     to a ratio of C = SQRT(4/π) = 1.128 and the space between
the left and    right (not center) hairlines is 0.736kW/hp or 0.746kW/hp
-- both measured    on the D scale.