Argo Mounting
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Jump to navigationJump to searchThe Argo Mounting was a rangefinder mounting that was gyro-stabilised in yaw.
Design
Fore Top Installations
The first ships given Argo mountings carried them free-standing in the fore top (often enlarged for the purpose).
In May, 1914, the following ships with Argo Mounts in their fore tops were to be provided one telescope Pattern G. 329 issued from Portsmouth:[1]
- Lord Nelson class
- H.M.S. Dreadnought
- Bellerophon class
- St. Vincent class
- H.M.S. Neptune
- Colossus class (it appears that Hercules might not have been given an Argo)[2]
- Orion class
- Invincible class
- Indefatigable class
"Argo Tower" Installations
In 1908, the Director of Naval Ordnance was keen to place rangefinders behind armour protection. As a result, the Lion and King George V classes and their successors housed their Argo range finders in a revolving armoured hood atop the G.C.T., an installation dubbed the Argo Tower.[3]
Footnotes
Bibliography
- Brooks, John (2005). Dreadnought Gunnery and the Battle of Jutland: The Question of Fire Control. Oxon: Routledge. ISBN 0714657026. (on Amazon.com and Amazon.co.uk).