SCELBI

The company SCELBI (derived from SCientific-ELectronics-BIology) Computer Consulting in 1973,[1] by Nat Wadsworth.

The SCELBI 8H was marketed in 1974 and was delivered either as an assembled unit or as a kit, with five basic circuit boards and provision for memory expansion to 16 KB (16,384 bytes).

The company also offered a version of the BASIC programming language called SCELBAL.

Optional modules for strings and transcendental functions allowed the system to operate in small memory configurations.

[2] Later in 1975, the availability of systems based on the more flexible 8080 processor reduced demand for the slower 8008-based product.

SCELBI computer, showing card cage construction and front panel toggle switches and LEDs.