Texas Instruments TI-36X Pro Engineering/Scientific Calculator | 9.7 Inch | Black.
$21.38
From the manufacturer
Texas Instruments TI-36X Pro Engineering/Scientific Calculator
Key features:
- Four-line display
- One- and two-variable statistics
- MultiView display shows multiple calculations at the same time on screen
- Select degrees/radians, floating/fix, number format modes
- Choose from three solvers: numeric equation, polynomial and system of linear equations
- Display a defined function in a tabular form
- Determine the numeric derivative and integral for real functions
- Perform vectors and matrices using a vector and matrix entry window
Specification: Texas Instruments TI-36X Pro Engineering/Scientific Calculator | 9.7 Inch | Black.
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10 reviews for Texas Instruments TI-36X Pro Engineering/Scientific Calculator | 9.7 Inch | Black.
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$21.38
Andrew W –
I bought this calculator for my upcoming FE Exam in October 2013. I have been using it for the past couple of months to get acquainted and to study. When I was in school I used the TI-89 Titanium religiously. Unfortunately that’s not permitted on the FE exam so I chose this one. Upon using it I must say that for a non-graphic calculator it’s fantastic. The shortcut keys (for exponents, powers of 10, fractions, etc.) are a nice touch. The built in equation solver, polynomial equation solver, system of equation solver certainly shave a lot of time off of my calculations concerning static equilibrium, quadratic equations and circuits. This calculator also does Matrices, up to 3×3 and vectors in three dimensions. It even has popular constants (permittivity, Boltzmann, Ideal Gas, standard atm, etc) built in along with a whole conversion menu. On top of that it does numerical integration and numerical derivatives and plenty of other things I’m probably not going to mention.I consider it to be more user friendly than the TI-89 Titanium because of the shortcut keys and nice interface. For example, to calculate a determinant on the TI-89 you must press 2nd, MATH then scroll to Matrix, then select Det( and press enter. Then you have to remember the syntax which is det([a1, a2, a3][b1, b2, b3][c1, c2, c3]) and finally press enter.On the Ti-36X Pro all you have to do is press 2nd, Matrix and scroll to edit and enter how many columns and rows you want in the specified matrix, press enter and then put in your values. Then once the values are saved you go back to the Matrix menu and select Determinant and put in the name of the matrix where you saved the information. Pretty slick for a smaller calculator.The four line display provides enough room to see what your doing and the text is fairly large which I like. With the bigger calculators you usually have to squint to see some numbers, especially in low-light situations. This calculator also features Mathprint. This means that fractions, integrals and most other mathematical notation shows up as it’s supposed to. However if you don’t like this there is a feature to turn it off. This is especially useful for when you’re calculating something like a parallel resistance circuit and you want to see that big fraction to make sure you didn’t make a mistake.Of course no review is complete without listing the gripes. There’s not too many problems with this calculator however there are something that really bug me. The first one being that there is no option to toggle “insert” like the TI-89 has. Usually I find myself needed to edit an equation that I just entered. Therefore I have to press second, then insert and put whatever I needed into the equation. Not a big deal but can get annoying at times.Second, I don’t like the chrome arithmetic buttons. At times I find myself hitting the subtract button when I wanted to do some addition. However I solved this problem by running a fine-tipped sharpie over the buttons and rubbing off the excess on the surface. Now the symbols have a black color in contrast with the chrome. Much easier to see and I suggest this method if anyone else has this problem.Third, you must press a button multiple times to get what you need. For example say I want to type a complex number (3+5i) on the screen. I press 3, +, 5 and then I have to press the “pi, e, i” key three times just to get the “i” symbol. Can be a bit annoying/frustrating and you might make a mistake if you’ve had way too much caffeine as I normally do. Although I suppose they had to do this to consolidate space in the design process so I can respect that. Just a little annoying but I guess it comes with the territory. This can add a bit of time to the learning curve if you’re not used to these “multipress” buttons.That’s basically it. For a non-graphing calculator I give it a 9/10. Comparing budget calculators, I’ve had the TI-30Xa and the Ti-30XIIS before and this one blows them out of the water obviously, hence the name TI-36X PRO. I’ve never had a Casio calculator so I can’t compare. With this many features and usability at the price of $17 or so it’s certainly an exemplary buy. A great budget engineering calculator and certainly the best to use on the FE exam in my opinion. Go with this one!
Eric Wardle –
This works super well and is easy to work. It has a lot of amazing functions that help out in my math class.
M in Wisconsin –
This is the perfect calculator for high school math and science. And the price was unbelievable! Better than running out to a store and buying one. Highly recommend it.
David Hartwell –
Even though I’m not a heavy user of calculators, I like ’em. Last count I had about 30 around the house. I especially like owning the best out there…just to play with. Weird, I know. Even though I own high end CAS models in TI and HP, these require opening the manual just to navigate around the keypad and menus. I don’t want to fire up a tank when a jeep will do.My primary area of mathematical interest is in number theory. Scientific calcs generally fail miserable for this purpose. But, for the most part, graphing functionality is not that critical to me. I frequently work on problems involving prime numbers, so I like that the TI-36X Pro can factor numbers upto 1,000,000, find gcd and lcm, do modular arithmetic, has good functionality with arrays and lists, including generating them by specifying a range of arguments for a function. The screen also displays in textbook format. The Ti-36X Pro provides all this while being about half the volume and weight of a typical graphing calc, and a fraction of the cost.Another advantage is the solar panel and button cell that run it. The power consumption of the cpu in graphing calcs is beyond what solar power can reasonably provide, and some eat AAAs like Cheerios. Because the TI-36X Pro is chip based rather than separate cpu and operating system, it does not have a full programming language and cannot be customized with apps, backed up or interfaced with a computer – features that most graphing calcs now provide. But the TI36X Pro is my current favorite for number theory operations that would otherwise require a spreadsheet or a graphing calc.It’s also a great scientific calc, with a full quiver of operations for calculus, statistics, vectors, matrices, solvers, base conversion, etc. CAS would be nice, but this is impractical to developed for a chip based calc. I suspect you won’t find a calc with more functionality without going to an o/s and cpu bases unit.Ok, it’s wonderful. There is a minor display problem (documented on Wikipedia) which may concern some, but I regard it as trivial.Now for my one peeve about this calc and how I resolved it. The shiny chrome buttons are too hard to read unless angled just right. Maybe you have better eyes than mine. Maybe you would just memorize these few buttons. But I couldn’t live with it. Not a problem, I love taking things apart. I found the TI-30XS to have the same outer shell, so I swapped the enter and 4 math operator buttons between them.Unfortunately, access to the buttons is was more difficult than expected. Instead of finding the usual mounting screws for a circuit board, this calc has the board mounted by moulded plastic fasteners. It was designed to be permanently assembled, making what should have been a simple modification quite challenging. I used a soldering iron, but wasn’t convinced this was the best way. I’m not suggesting or recommending you try this (and will not be responsible for your results)! It could easily be botched. I did each disassembly / reassembly step on the TI-30XS first to have that experience before doing the same on the Pro. Be prepared to sacrifice at least the TI-30SX. I managed to get both reassembled, but ended up with my sin button upside down on the Pro and have been reluctant to disassemble it again, because remelting the fasteners would deteriorate the plastic further.There is a high probability for not getting one or both of the circuit boards to remount. If this happens, you could try inserting a thin piece of closed cell foam between the board and case back to provide enough pressure to hold the board in place during key presses.
Bk –
engineering schools are banning graphing calculators because people program them. this one gets 90% of the function of a non programmed graphing calculator for 1/8th the price. super good calculator. can do stats on it, and it will solve complicated algebra for you, saving time on exams.
RNsz –
Feels great to use and is intuitive. Should pick this up for college math as it is test approved
Danielle –
I needed this calculator for a college course and this was the most affordable version I could find. It works great!
noah –
Occasionally I get confused and argue my way to getting the numbers displayed in the form that I like best. I need to remember the -MODE- button and that it scrolls further than what the initial screen shows. Other-wise, I like ‘um. That they hold the lines used, even after it has been turned ‘off’. Turn it on again and you are able to scroll back a few entries.I have 4 or so, so, they are where I might be when I want to use it. Even keep one in my vehicle to do gas mileage , or what ever.
Luke –
Wow! I used this calculator all throughout highschool and might I say, we got through some pretty darn tough times. From my first ever trig test, to solving string theory me and Miss TI- 36X got to some serious business. To be honest, I wasn’t too sure about this calculator at first. That was, until the first time we laid together. Now electrifying might be a little too on the nose here but after we were done I felt like a little sweatshop worker; the kind that don’t speak english. Ever since then I practically am the calculator. Anyways toodleoo.
Krystal –
Got this for my kiddo. School made them buy it. Works great.