MOSCOW
Home
to MK-57b
Museum of Soviet Calculators on the Web


Stats...



1992

size

155 mm
78 mm
28 mm



23 rubles




3 x AA

8-digit+sign fluorescent
plus/minus 10^8-1


The manual for this calculator lists three variations

MK-57A
MK-57b
MK-57B

Elektronika MK-57A

"I have bought 2 calculators for you (MK-57A and MK-66). They looks not great (on my unprofessional opinion) but I would like to accompany them by a story which definitely is great!

Elektronika MK-57A


Both were bought not in the shop but at a street market. The old man who sold them told me that generally he sells some electrical things (switches, wires, etc.) which are received from some factory in Uljanovsk1.

To get these electrical wares our old man contacts with a person who works at the sell-department at the factory. The last time they contacted that guy asked our old man to take several calculators to sell (these ones WERE produced at their factory 6 years ago!!!). The point is that staff of the factory get their salary not by money but by these calculators . Can you believe? I can because it is not typical, but not rare, event in modern Russia when salary is given by factory's product. The staff has to sell it to get money. Otherwise they would not get money at all (I know the people who have not been getting the salary for 15 months!). But our case is the worst because it is impossible to sell many Russian calculators2. It is a reason that I bought both items (with batteries, power boxes, accumulators and device to recharged them) for 35,000 Russian rubles (~6 USD) only! It is extremely cheap even on Russian price scale. One weeks ago I bought 2 batteries for some Marina's toy for 10,000 RR. In principle I could buy the worse batteries and paid only 4,000 RR but I could buy also better ones for 20,000.3

Both calculators, as I said were produced in 1992 (one in February, second in April) and could not be sold until two crazy guys (Igor from Moscow and Andrew from Sidney) buy them. Because SU was broken on December 7 (or so), 1991 they represent the first Russian calculators (or maybe the last Soviet ones, it depends on point of view...).



Battery Pack D2-10v
D2-10v transformer
box
MK-57A is accompanied by power box (exactly the same type as MK-66's one) and 3 batteries (AA type). Calculator works (for the present). It was impossible to check power box at the street market. I did it at home. It does not work. Today I visited the seller again to exchange bad power box for working one. There was a long discussion between us. At first he refused. His motivation was: "These all are such cheep that have right to be non-working". But I insisted and got the new power box. I did not check it and leave this for you - at any rate I will not be able to perform the second exchange. Sorry in advance. BUT the power box for this calculator is the same as for MK-66 (which works, anyway for the present) and for other Russian calculators. Sure you have got such kind of power boxes." - Igor Sokalski

Notes:

  1. Uljanovsk is a town in the eastern part of European Russia. It's old name is Simbirsk, but in 1924 (when Lenin died) it was renamed to Uljanovsk because Lenin's original family name was Uljanov (Lenin is just a pseudonym)
  2. It was a first time for several years when I saw the Russian calculator to be sold in Russia. Typically you can buy foreign calculators only. I think that calculators do not produced in Russia because nobody buys them. Everybody use foreign ones (typically from Japan) because their price is not so large but they are much better then Soviet/Russian calculators.
  3. To check the equivalent values in your own currency, you may visit Unique Photo Cards CURRENCY CONVERTER.

MOSCOWMuseum of Soviet Calculators on the Webe-mail webmaster
Home
Home
to mk-57B
MK-57B


The content of Museum of Soviet Calculators (on the Web) is copyright © 1997-2001 Andrew Davie & contributors.
Unless indicated to the contrary, permission is granted for private non-commercial use of images and text.
Last modified on