We consider the strength and effective content of restricted versions of
Hindman's Theorem in which the number of colors is specified and the length of
the sums has a specified finite bound. Let HTk≤n denote the
assertion that for each k-coloring c of N there is an infinite
set X⊆N such that all sums ∑x∈Fx for F⊆X and 0<∣F∣≤n have the same color. We prove that there is a
computable 2-coloring c of N such that there is no infinite
computable set X such that all nonempty sums of at most 2 elements of X
have the same color. It follows that HT2≤2 is not provable
in RCA0 and in fact we show that it implies SRT22 in
RCA0. We also show that there is a computable instance of
HT3≤3 with all solutions computing 0′. The proof of this
result shows that HT3≤3 implies ACA0 in
RCA0