Compukit 1

YEAR: 1970
ITEM: Digital Computer
COMPANY: Limrose Electronics
COUNTRY: England
IN OUR COLLECTION: Yes
Although it is a training device, the Compukit 1 may qualify as one of the earliest personal computers ever offered to the public. It pre-dates contenders such as the Kenbak-1 and the NRI 832 by several months. The only digital personal computer we know of that is older is the COMSPACE-650.
The Compukit 1 is, as you might suspect, a kit that the buyer assembled on his/her own. It arrived in a bright red box that was filled with everything that was needed to build it, including a soldering iron and solder. (Of course, you still had to supply your own batteries...some things never change.) Once it was assembled, the buyer had a "mini-computer' that would add binary numbers and manipulate negative numbers. It was described in the accompanying flyer1 as "a logic simulator and educational aid for teaching the fundamentals of computer electronics, digital logic and Boolean algebra". It was, according to the flyer, the "Ideal gift for intelligent teenagers, amateurs, students, teachers and business executives."
If you wanted to buy several of these kits, you could connect them together. At the ITEX70 conference in Manchester in 1970, Limrose Electronics exhibited ten connected kits that could play "Noughts & Crosses" (that's Tic-Tac-Toe for those of us living in the colonies) against a human opponent.
The Compukit 1 was created by Dr. Ravi Raizada who founded Limrose Electronics (now Limrose Group). The flyer points out that the Instruction Book was written by "a Fellow of the British Computer Society". Since Dr. Raizada is a Fellow of the British Computer Society we are assuming that he wrote the Instruction Manual. At one point in his life, Dr. Raizada lived right here in Pennsylvania where he taught at Penn State University (Although I haven't had the opportunity to chat with him, I think he would have been much happier at West Chester University which is part of the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education!)
The Compukit 1 in our collection was never assembled. It still has the transistors, diodes, resisters, mounting clips and 2 miniature indicator lamps in their original plastic bags. The box for the soldering iron is in the kit but the soldering iron itself is missing...guess it found a use on another project!
Recently (Feb. 2021), a really nice article was published by deftcoyote at HACKADAY.IO on the Compukit 1. It has some great artwork. If you are interested, you can find it here.
1Two flyers and an Instruction Manual were included with the Compukit in our collection. The two flyers are dated October 1970 and November 1970. The 16 page Instruction Manual is simply dated 1970.
Related Items
Related Item 1: Compukit 1 Deluxe ModelRelated Item 2: Compukit 2 Brochure
Viewer Stories & Comments
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Documents
Documents for this item have not yet been scanned or not yet posted. There are a lot of pages...contact us if you have an immediate need. (Although there are not a lot of "immediate needs" for a 70+ year old computer!)
Exceedingly Rare
The Compukit 1 brochure states that the kit was being used by "hundreds of education institutions and individuals like yourself throughout the county." Unfortunately, very few seem to have survived.
One was donated to the The National Museum of Computing (TNMOC) at Bletchley Park, England. Bletchley Park is known as the famous code-breaking center during WWII.
The third known Compukit 1 model is also in England at the ICL Computer Museum collection that was put together and is curated by Pete. I'm not sure how old the collection is but the website was first registered in 2006.
[Update: January 2023. As best I can tell, the ICL Museum seems to have added a second Compukit 1 to their collection. It looks to be a later version...the manual that is pictured looks more professional than the original manuals. (No insult intended, Ravi...I still like your original one best!]
For more information, click on the link(s) below.
The ICL Museum collection (2 of them)
The National Museum of Computing
If you know the location of any other of these items, please let us know by contacting us at Director@TheComputerChurch.com .
OUR DEFINITIONS OF RARITY
One of a Kind: Only known existing item.
Exceedingly Rare: Only 2 to 10 known to exist.
Very Rare: Only 11 to 25 are known to exist.
Rare: Only 26 to 50 are known to exist.
Difficult: Difficult to find.
Available:Can be commonly be purchased.
Unknown: We cannot make a determination.
(For comparison: Many people consider the Apple-1 computer to be rare. As of 2025 there are 92 confirmed and probable Apple-1 computers.)


















