Eddie's Math and Calculator Blog Retro Review TI95 Procalc

Ti 95. DATAMATH One look at the keyboard and one may mistake the TI-95 Procalc as a BASIC Programming calculator The TI-95 Procalc is one of the first calculators to contain function keys, F1 through F5.

Texas Instruments TI95 Procalc Calculator Amazon.ca Electronics
Texas Instruments TI95 Procalc Calculator Amazon.ca Electronics from www.amazon.ca

It was rather large, measuring 3.7" by 8" by 1" and had a 16-character alphanumeric display for the main display, and a set of five 3-character displays for use as menu items. It helped track down a high resistance fault in a 250HP motor overload relay, that would have otherwise kept us puzzled.

Texas Instruments TI95 Procalc Calculator Amazon.ca Electronics

It was rather large, measuring 3.7" by 8" by 1" and had a 16-character alphanumeric display for the main display, and a set of five 3-character displays for use as menu items. It had 8kB of RAM and could be connected to PC-324 compatible printers It helped track down a high resistance fault in a 250HP motor overload relay, that would have otherwise kept us puzzled.

DATAMATH PICTURES. I just reviewed my favorite keystroke programmable calculator, the Texas Instruments TI-95 ProCalc! This is the most advanced keystroke programmable TI ever. The TI-95 Procalc is one of the first calculators to contain function keys, F1 through F5.

DATAMATH PICTURES. A close relative to the TI-95 PROCALC, the TI-74 BASICALC explains the typewriter style keyboard. It can be used as an advanced scientific calculator when not in programming mode.