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'''Dip''' is the difference in elevation angle the line of sight to an object from one vantage point (say from a [[Gunnery Director|director]]) and | '''Dip''' is the difference in elevation angle the line of sight to an object from one vantage point (say from a [[Gunnery Director|director]], or simply a sighting telescope mounted a few feet above the barrel) and the bore of a gun. | ||
The Royal Navy defined a "datum point" (often, the armoured director position, or the [[Trunnion|trunnions]] of the turret highest above the water) for each ship which would share precise gunnery pointing angles, as in director firing, and provide mechanisms that would convert angles from that position to their own. This permitted the director's [[Elevation Transmitters|elevation transmitters]] to send out these reference elevations, confident that each receiver would massage the angle a bit as their own position on board required. | '''dipAngle = arctan(heightOfSightAboveGun / range)''' | ||
The dip angle would be negative when the gunsight or observer were below the bore of the gun (requiring him to look higher than normal). | |||
==Gunsight Dip== | |||
Gun sights were almost always positioned quite near the bore of the gun they controlled, but sometimes they were a few feet above or below. While this seems like a small matter, at short ranges, the Royal Navy considered it worthy of consideration and so this sight dip angle (which depended only on the vertical offset) would be incorporated into the design of a gun sight. As an example given for [[H.M.S. Africa (1905)||''H.M.S. Africa'']], where the telescopes were 3.77 feet above the bore, the dip angles at various ranges were:<ref>''Manual of Gunnery for HM Fleet, Volume I part 1, 1907'', p. 38.</ref> | |||
{| | |||
!Range<br><small>(yards)</small>||Dip Angle<br><small>(degrees)</small> | |||
|- | |||
|100||0.717 | |||
|- | |||
|200||0.358 | |||
|- | |||
|300||0.242 | |||
|- | |||
|400||0.179 | |||
|- | |||
|500||0.142 | |||
|- | |||
|1000||0.071 | |||
|- | |||
|1500||0.046 | |||
|- | |||
|2000||0.038 | |||
|- | |||
|2500||0.029 | |||
|- | |||
|3000||0.025 | |||
|- | |||
|3500||0.021 | |||
|- | |||
|4000||0.017 | |||
|} | |||
==Director Dip== | |||
The great height difference between a director and the guns it controlled also required separate dip corrections at each gun, given their different heights above the water. | |||
Since a ship had more than one director, the Royal Navy defined a shipwide "datum point" (often, the armoured director position, or the [[Trunnion|trunnions]] of the turret highest above the water) for each ship which would share precise gunnery pointing angles, as in director firing, and provide mechanisms that would convert angles from that position to their own. This permitted the director's [[Elevation Transmitters|elevation transmitters]] to send out these reference elevations, confident that each receiver would massage the angle a bit as their own position on board required. | |||
For instance, the Royal Navy's [[Elevation Receiver|elevation receivers]] often featured a "dip strip" that could be shipped on their face. These corrected a number of small issues, but chief amongst them was that which earned them their name. | For instance, the Royal Navy's [[Elevation Receiver|elevation receivers]] often featured a "dip strip" that could be shipped on their face. These corrected a number of small issues, but chief amongst them was that which earned them their name. | ||
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==Footnotes== | ==Footnotes== | ||
{{reflist}} | |||
==Bibliography== | ==Bibliography== | ||
* {{BibUkManualGunneryVol1Part11907}} | |||
*{{ | |||
[[Category:Fire Control]] | [[Category:Fire Control]] |
Revision as of 17:41, 30 April 2011
Dip is the difference in elevation angle the line of sight to an object from one vantage point (say from a director, or simply a sighting telescope mounted a few feet above the barrel) and the bore of a gun.
dipAngle = arctan(heightOfSightAboveGun / range)
The dip angle would be negative when the gunsight or observer were below the bore of the gun (requiring him to look higher than normal).
Gunsight Dip
Gun sights were almost always positioned quite near the bore of the gun they controlled, but sometimes they were a few feet above or below. While this seems like a small matter, at short ranges, the Royal Navy considered it worthy of consideration and so this sight dip angle (which depended only on the vertical offset) would be incorporated into the design of a gun sight. As an example given for |H.M.S. Africa, where the telescopes were 3.77 feet above the bore, the dip angles at various ranges were:[1]
Range (yards) |
Dip Angle (degrees) |
---|---|
100 | 0.717 |
200 | 0.358 |
300 | 0.242 |
400 | 0.179 |
500 | 0.142 |
1000 | 0.071 |
1500 | 0.046 |
2000 | 0.038 |
2500 | 0.029 |
3000 | 0.025 |
3500 | 0.021 |
4000 | 0.017 |
Director Dip
The great height difference between a director and the guns it controlled also required separate dip corrections at each gun, given their different heights above the water.
Since a ship had more than one director, the Royal Navy defined a shipwide "datum point" (often, the armoured director position, or the trunnions of the turret highest above the water) for each ship which would share precise gunnery pointing angles, as in director firing, and provide mechanisms that would convert angles from that position to their own. This permitted the director's elevation transmitters to send out these reference elevations, confident that each receiver would massage the angle a bit as their own position on board required.
For instance, the Royal Navy's elevation receivers often featured a "dip strip" that could be shipped on their face. These corrected a number of small issues, but chief amongst them was that which earned them their name.
See Also
Footnotes
- ↑ Manual of Gunnery for HM Fleet, Volume I part 1, 1907, p. 38.