Dreyer Table Mark IV*

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Mark IV* Dreyer Table c1918, front
Shown with a Standard Bearing Plot which was probably never actually used. Notice the elaborate Electrical Dumaresq which could automatically transfer rates, and the Range Typewriter which replaced the Brownsrigg Keyboards the tables used until 1917.[Citation needed]

The Mark IV* Dreyer Table was developed in 1915 to embody small improvements in the Mark IV Dreyer Tables developed just a year prior. The changes modest enough that some of the Mark IV tables were later updated to the Mark IV* standard without the need for outright replacement.

The prototype of the new table was installed in Iron Duke in mid-August, 1914[1]

Mark IV Dreyer Table c1918, front
This illustrates the Standard Bearing Plot and its Deflection Totaliser which were featured so prominently in the 1918 Handbook, but which may never have been widely deployed if at all.
Mark IV Dreyer Table as it might have been manned, c1918.
This illustrates the Standard Bearing Plot and its Deflection Totaliser which were featured so prominently in the 1918 Handbook, but which may never have been widely deployed if at all.

Development

The tables were 7.5 inches wider than the Mark IV tables to accommodate a range plot that was 7.5 inches wider.

Overall Dimensions (1918)[2]
Width 9 feet, 10.5 inches
Depth 4 feet, 6.5 inches
Height of Range Rate Grid 3 feet, 5 inches
Height of top of dumaresq 5 feet, 9 inches

Motive Power

As in the Mark III design, the table had a electric motor that drove the paper plots and the range and bearing clocks and which could fall back to a hand-crank in case of power loss.

In addition, the table needed a pair of motors to pass range rate and deflection from the electrical dumaresq. This could not be powered from the handcrank alluded to above, but in cases of power failure, they'd be declutched and their follow-up function would be assigned to human use of a pair of small hand-wheels on the lower face of the dumaresq[Citation needed].

Electrical Dumaresq

An Electrical Dumaresq replaced the Mark VI dumaresq used in the Mark III table. It was helm-free like the Mark III's dumaresq by virtue of a gyro-compass input to allow it to track own heading. Its new virtue came from the even more cumbersome assembly that dangled from its dial plate which contained contacts to electrically prompt followers in the lower housing to track the range rate and deflection indicated on the dumaresq.

Range Clock

Bearing Clock

Spotting Corrector

Range Plot

The Mark IV's range plot was allowed plotting from 2,000 to 17,000 yards, and this was proving insufficient in light of early battle experience[Citation needed]. While the Mark IV tables received a retrofit in the form of an "extended range scale" that could boost their plot area to a new realm from 10,000 to 25,000 yards, this introduced complexity and created new ways the TS crew could make mistakes.

The expedient in the IV* table was to add 7.5 inches to the width of the range plot to give it a range envelope from 2,000 to 20,000 yards without need for an extended range scale or any other trickery.

Rate Grid The rate grid grew in sophistication by war's end, from one that had irregular markings to translate its wire angles to range rates to one with linear range rate markings, a flexible shaft to keep it aligned to the rate on the range clock, and a means of temporarily deflecting it to explore rates at variance with that set on the clock.

Plotting Range Cuts The Mark IV* tables used the rather clumsy but sufficient Brownrigg Keyboard through Jutland until a more elegant manual Range Typewriter was issued in 1917.[3] These tools gave them the ability to plot ranges from multiple rangefinders with an increased degree of ease and simplicity.

Range Pencils Initial production tables had a single red pencil to plot clock range. As early drawings imply it was first installed, it appears that the tuning handle had no pedalling clutch and so intrinsically altered clock range and gun range when it was used. This implies that the tuning handle would only be used at the beginning of an encounter.

[Citation needed][TO BE CONTINUED - TONE]

Plotting Ranges 2,000 - 20,000 yards
(a +8,000 yard extended scale added later allowed plotting to 28,000 yards????)[4]
Paper width 45 inches
Scale 400 yards/inch
Paper speed 2 inches / minute

???? did these ever have these? The extended range scales were likely fitted to tables as opportunity around around the time (1915?) such a modification was made to ???? (Brooks)[Citation needed].

Bearing Plot

[TO BE CONTINUED - TONE] On plans drawn up in 1912-1913 and outlined in a Technical History drafted by Dreyer, the bearing plot was on paper 15 inches wide with a simple rate grid whose irregular edge markings as it was rotated converted the angle of rotation into a number of degrees per minute of bearing rate. By February, 1913, a single deflection drum could convert the bearing rate of the grid's inclination to a gun deflection.[5]

The Handbook for Capt F.C. Dreyer's Fire Control Tables, 1918 indicates that these were at some point to be provided with standard bearing plots[6], but these units received such scant service before the introduction of G.D.T. gear that it is hard to bank that many were actually fitted.

Deployment

See Also

Footnotes

  1. Brooks. Dreadnought Gunnery and the Battle of Jutland. p. 169.
  2. Dreyer Handbook, 1918 p. 90.
  3. Brooks. Dreadnought Gunnery, p. 173.
  4. Dreyer Handbook, 1918 p. 17.
  5. , pPollen Aim Corrector System, Part I. Technical History and Technical Comparison with Commander F. C. Dreyer's Fire Control System, pp. 47-8.
  6. Handbook for Capt F.C. Dreyer's Fire Control Tables, 1918. pp. 13-15.

Bibliography