"Z1 was a machine weighing about 1 tonne in weight, which consisted of some 20,000 parts. It was a programmable computer, based on binary floating-point numbers and a binary switching system. It consisted completely of thin metal sheets, which Zuse and his friends produced using a jigsaw." "The [data] input device was a keyboard...The Z1's programs (Zuse called them Rechenpläne, computing plans) were stored on punch tapes using an 8-bit code" Construction of the Z1 was privately financed. Zuse got money from his parents, his sister Lieselotte, some students of the fraternity
AV Motiv (cf.
Helmut Schreyer), and Kurt Pannke (a calculating machine manufacturer in Berlin) to do so. Zuse constructed the Z1 in his parents' apartment; in fact, he was allowed to use the living room for his construction. In 1936, Zuse quit his job in airplane construction to build the Z1. Zuse is said to have used "thin metal strips" and perhaps "metal cylinders" or glass plates to construct Z1. There were probably no commercial
relays in it (though the Z3 is said to have used a few telephone relays). The only electrical unit was an electric motor to give the
clock frequency of 1
Hz (cycle per second) to the machine. 'The memory was constructed from thin strips of slotted metal and small pins and proved faster, smaller, and more reliable, than relays. The Z2 used the mechanical memory of the Z1 but used relay-based arithmetic. The Z3 was experimentally built entirely of relays. The
Z4 was the first attempt at a commercial computer, reverting to the faster and more economical mechanical slotted metal strip memory, with relay processing, of the Z2, but the war interrupted the Z4 development.' The Z1 was never very reliable in operation because of poor synchronization caused by internal and external stresses on the mechanical parts. While various sources make various statements about exactly how Zuse's computers were constructed, a clear understanding is gradually emerging. ==Reconstruction==