Gunlayer
A Gunlayer (or Layer — Pointer in American parlance) is the person who controls the angle of elevation of a gun. Typically, he does this by rotating a hand-wheel or working a hydraulic lever in the case of a larger gun. How he establishes the proper angle of elevation differs when the gun is being locally laid laid by director. The gunlayer also fires the gun in many instances, although sometimes this is done electrically from the director.
It's important to note that in all but the very smallest guns, the layer only controls the elevation of the gun, and not its lateral rotation. A separate man, the trainer or turret director trainer generally performs that task.
Station and Equipment
On pedestal mounted guns, the layer was generally stationed on the left side of the mounting. In a large turret with 2 guns, each gun would have a layer sitting on its left side. In a pedestal mounting, he would have a geared hand-wheel which would drive the mounting through its elevating arc. In a large turret, he would use a hydraulic lever or hand-wheel to elevate the gun. He would have a sighting telescope or periscope and possibly some data receivers.
Local Laying
When a gun is not being laid by a director, the layer looks through a sighting telescope or periscope of some kind and works his elevating controls to place his cross hairs onto an agreed point of aim on the target. When this is done, he has laid the gun. In small geared mountings, he may endeavour to work his controls to continuously negate the pitching and rolling of his ship to keep the cross hairs "on", in a process called continuous aim. Otherwise, he might simply place his cross hairs so the motion of his own ship causes them to sweep through the target periodically and he would press the firing trigger only at the proper moment where the cross hairs were moving through the point of aim, a process called firing on the roll.
Director Laying
When a director was being used to lay the guns, the gunlayer would not look through a sighting scope but instead work his elevating controls as he watched a data terminal called an elevation receiver or (in late-war British destroyers) a similar mechanism mounted nearby. In such a case, he would endeavour to keep two pointers in agreement, and this would indicate the proper elevation was on the gun. In such cases, the firing impulse would almost certainly arrive from the director and the layer would simply monitor his pointers except perhaps to sneak a peek once in a while to verify things appeared to be working properly, as the cross hairs should still be on the target if all was being set correctly.
Firing
When laying his own gun locally, the layer would also generally fire the gun by pulling a trigger on a pistol grip (often, even small guns had two electrical firing triggers for redundancy, and possibly a percussion-firing lanyard to be worked by someone else should both of these fail). When a director was laying the guns, the layer would usually rely on the director to electrically fire the gun.
See Also
Footnotes
Bibliography
- Template:BibUKGunneryDrillBookBookI1913
- Template:BibUKDirectorFiringHandbook1917
- Template:BibUKDirectorFiringForDestroyers1918