pages 26 to 48.
Transcription
pages 26 to 48.
© 2001 National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors, Inc. Reproduction prohibited without written permission. For the next hour and thirty-five minutes, Commander Byrd was busy with all his watches, sextant and sun compass. Suddenly he came forward, shook my hand, and declared—we have reached the North Pole. We circled the Pole for a few times and started our return. After about six hours, we sighted land, which certainly looked good to both of us. It took another hour to reach the coast of Spitzbergen. The oil pressure was still up in the leaking engine, although half of the oil had been lost. In a great tribute to the navigation skill of Commander Byrd, we reached our destination within less than a mile of our intended point of return. In one hour more we were at King’s Bay and after a smooth landing we taxied up to the place we left sixteen hours before. Our mission was accomplished.” Note: The navigation instruments included: a Waltham 18-size sidereal watch; a Longines 25-size chronometer with power reserve; a Longines chronograph with two registers; a Pioneer Instrument Bumstead Sun Compass; a Pioneer Instrument aircraft sextant; and a Bendix wind drift indicator. Airship Navigation Watches, c. 1920 Junghans Watch Company Germany The two watches were used in tandem by the Zeppelin Navigator. The one on the left is the conventional timekeeper, while the one on the right is an elapsed time chronograph. Instrument Panel Watch, c.1922 Hausmann Italy This watch was in the cockpit of an airship named Roma, purchased by the U.S. from Italy after WWI. On its maiden voyage, a fault in the controls caused it to dive into high tension wires and explode. This watch was one of the few items to survive the crash. 4.1.2001 26 Society of Military Horologists Chapter 143 © 2001 National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors, Inc. Reproduction prohibited without written permission. Navigation Chronometer, c.1927 Elgin Watch Company Elgin, Illinois Presented to W.F. “Bull” Halsey, Jr. when he was designated a Naval Aviator, this navigation chronometer is a B.W. Raymond model with a power reserve dial and chronometer accuracy. 6.4.2001 Pocket Watch, c.1933 Hamilton Watch Co. Lancaster, PA Made as a prototype for the Navy, this 16size model 992 watch was used by Admiral Richard Byrd during his arctic and antartic explorations. 10.1.2001 Society of Military Horologists Chapter 143 27 © 2001 National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors, Inc. Reproduction prohibited without written permission. Finding the South Pole—Admiral Richard E. Byrd Preface: For many years I have been intrigued with the exploits of Richard E. Byrd, arctic explorer extraordinaire. Perhaps my interest was honed by the fact that he and I were both naval aviators, and that I acquired a watch bearing his name that was reputed to have been used on one of his antarctic expeditions. He was the first man to fly over both the North and South Poles. In this article, I will attempt to summarize the exploits of the South Pole flight as related in his book, Little America, by highlighting the precision of the navigation and the significance of timekeeping in reaching this goal. he golden age of aviation exploration occured during the nineteen twenties and thirties. Lindbergh made his eventful flight across the Atlantic, and the airship “Graf Zeppelin” completed its around-the-world trip. It seems new records were being set almost every day in terms of the distances aircraft were flying as well as the speed and daring of the incredible aeronauts. Two of the greatest flights occurred under the aegis of U.S. Navy Commander Byrd: first flying over the North Pole in 1926 and then three years later flying over the South Pole. Richard Byrd was a man of many talents and great ambition. He was a natural leader, a stickler for detail, and a person who believed thorough preparation was the best way to deal with the harsh environment of Antarctic living and could bring success. But above all he was a man with a mission and was convincing enough to find friends from many governmental and private sources to finance his trip. After assembling a very talented crew with many skills, he set out by ship with three planes and provisions to explore by air and by ground this great uncharted territory. This is his personal story of the South Pole flight: “On November 25, 1929, the weather seemed perfect for the flight. The final report read perfect visibility. No clouds anywhere. The meteorologist remarked that, if you don’t go now you may never have another chance as good as this. And that T Bumstead Sun Compass, c.1929-1938 Pioneer Instrument Company United States This instrument was used on polar expeditions by Admiral Richard E. Byrd. At the pole a conventional compass does not work, so this compass, incorporating a watch mechanism, was developed for navigation. 28 Society of Military Horologists Chapter 143 © 2001 National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors, Inc. Reproduction prohibited without written permission. Explorer’s Watch, c. 1930 Longines Wittnauer Watch Company New York/Switzerland A watch used on Admiral Byrd’s Antarctic Expedition of 1933. It has a 24-hour dial, a seconds dial at 24, and a power reserve dial at 12. These watches were timed from a Naval Observatory time signal at the South Pole Station. was that. The Ford Trimotor was loaded, gasoline and food supplies placed aboard, the gear checked. I made a careful check of the watches and chronometers which were among the last things put aboard. For days I had nursed the chronometers, checking them against the time tick broadcast every night from the U.S. We knew their exact loss and gain. We had to know. An error in time would put the Bumstead sun compass off and our geographical position as well. “At 0320 hours (3:30 a.m.) , the plane and its crew of four were off. The skis were in the air after a run of 30 seconds, all engines of the Ford Trimotor were in perfect sync. As the plane gained altitude the course was set for the Axel Heilberg Glacier, better known as the ‘Hump.’ This was the highest point to be encountered on the flight. Whether the plane could traverse the icebound pass with the weight of its load of gas and gear was an unknown. “From time to time landmarks would appear in the form of Depots formed by huts and gear stacked by ground parties of this and other expeditions. Keeping on course was possible by using the sun compass and by taking constant readings of the drift indicator. Since the wind came from the east, it was necessary to nose the plane 10 to 20 degrees to the left of the true course to make good a straight course to the south. Had there been anyone below he would have been surprised to see a plane headed well to the east but flying steadily to the south. “By 0915 hours that fateful morning we had reached the ‘Hump.’ Our altitude was 9,000 feet, climbing steadily all the while. All of the spare gas tins were now depleted and cast overboard. It had taken us longer to reach the mountains due to head winds. Using the stopwatch I could calculate our speed over the ground. If we were to make a passage through the pass we needed greater maneuverability than we had at that moment. Once we entered, there would be no retreat. But we needSociety of Military Horologists Chapter 143 29 © 2001 National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors, Inc. Reproduction prohibited without written permission. ed power to climb. The pilot gestured—overboard—200 pounds! Which would it be, gas or food, in case of a forced landing? “The decision was made. A bag of food went spinning out to the glade. But the down drafts became even rougher. More! And so another bag went flying—in total, 450 pounds of food—enough to feed the four of us for two months. The sacrifice was the saving factor. The plane leaped with a sudden jump, clearing the floor of the pass by several hundred feet. “Finally we were over the ‘Hump’ and the floor of the plateau stretched before us in a white immensity to the south. The Pole lay dead ahead over the horizon less than 300 miles away. We laid our line of flight on the 171st meridian. “The drift indicator showed a wind from the east. The influence of the drift on the course was always a bothersome element. The sun compass was vital to keep the plane on course. Now ground speed was needed to know when we arrived at the Pole. By timing with a stopwatch how long it takes a point on the ground to run the length of the drift indicator, then turning and passing over the object again, it was possible, using tables, to calculate the speed. “As we neared the Pole I attempted to shoot the sun with the bubble sextant. At 1238 I finally shot the sun. It was quite low, but the sight gave us a line of latitude which confirmed our dead reckoning navigation. So the Pole was actually in sight but I could not yet spare it so much as a glance. Chronometers, drift indicators and compasses are hard task masters. At 1314 hours Greenwich Civil Time, our calculations showed us at the South Pole at an altitude of 11,000 feet. “Turning back over the spot I dropped a small flag weighted by a stone. For a few seconds we stood over the spot where other explorers also stood many years before. There was nothing now to mark that scene—only desolation and solitude. And that in brief, is all there is to tell about the South Pole. One gets there, period! It’s the effort to get there that counts. “We put the Pole behind us and raced for home.” Editor’s Note: Richard Byrd led a number of expeditions to the South Pole. On these occasions he used several types of chronometers and watches. His detent chronometers were an Adams # 5837 and a Frodsham #3412. His chronometer watches were both Longines and Hamiltons. All were timed and “put up dry” since there were no known oils available up to the 1940s that could withstand the frigid weather. The South Pole flight chronometer was a Hamilton 21-jewel, 36-size chronometer watch. Another timepiece kept at the “Little America” base was a Longines 24hour mounted chronometer watch. The stopwatch was a Hamilton prototype 19jewel,16-size chronograph. One of then-Commander Byrd’s watches was a Hamilton 499E— a 21-jewel, 18-size model. The other instruments used for navigation—the sun compass, drift indicator, and bubble sextant—were later refined and used by the U.S. Navy in World War II. Admiral Byrd received many decorations and honors for his polar expeditions. 30 Society of Military Horologists Chapter 143 © 2001 National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors, Inc. Reproduction prohibited without written permission. The Epic Flight of the Tingmissartoq n 1933 Colonel Charles Lindbergh and his wife Anne Morrow Lindbergh made a 30,000 mile swing around the Atlantic Ocean. Long over-water flights, a wide range of weather conditions, the necessity for accurate navigation, and the scarcity of landing sites were all problems that were to face aviators until the end of the decade. The results of this flight and the challenges they overcame were well documented and served as an important reference for both military and commercial pilots. The name of the Lockheed Sirius monoplane used in the flight was given by Greenland Eskimos and meant “The one who flies like a big bird.” The plane was equipped with pontoons and featured full dual controls. The cruising speed was 103 knots, at which speed 25 gallons of fuel per hour were used. On the 1800 mile flight leg from Bathurst, Africa, to Natal, South America, the total fuel capacity was 440 gallons carried in the floats and wing tanks. The engine was a 9-cylinder Wright Cyclone F of 710 horsepower. It was fitted with a Hamilton controllable pitch propeller. The flight was undertaken primarily to look at possible routes that could be used for air service between North and South America and Europe by Pan-American Airways. However, there was a secret mission as well. The Lindberghs flew from South America north through the Caribbean, selecting air base sites that could be used for military operations in time of war. On a personal note, the writer spent time at several of these bases during World War II in Northern Brazil, the Guianas, and Trinidad which were selected by the Lindberghs on this flight. Overall, the trip lasted more that five months during which time the seaplane traveled 30,000 miles, visited three oceans, four continents and 21 countries. The Greenland Ice Cap and Atlantic Ocean were each crossed in both directions. The basic panel instruments were of the best type available at that time for both visual and blind flying. Special equipment included a collapsible rubber boat and emergency radio gear for the ocean flights. The navigation equipment included two complete radio outfits for transmitting and receiving and a fixed loop for taking accu- I Lindbergh’s Aviator Watch, c. 1927 Longines Watch Company Switzerland and United States This unique watch was designed and worn by Charles A. Lindbergh, the first aviator to complete a non-stop transatlantic flight in May 1927. Its uniqueness is derived from the outer rotating bezel that allows a direct reading of the Greenwich hour angle of celestial bodies (stars and sun) for finding one’s position while flying. The inner Weems dial can be set to the exact time using a radio signal. This watch has a 16-size B.W. Raymond movement and can be adjusted to five positions. Society of Military Horologists Chapter 143 31 © 2001 National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors, Inc. Reproduction prohibited without written permission. rate bearings by heading toward the sending station. Mrs. Lindbergh did all the radio work, transmitting and receiving in Morse Code, being in contact with South American stations and ships at sea. Along with this, an Air Almanac, a Line of Position Book, a bubble sextant, Mercator charts, and two second-setting navigating watches, one reading in arc, were in constant use. Lindbergh stated that the two navigating watches kept time to within a fraction of a second, most remarkable considering the conditions to which they were subjected. All of the celestial navigation sightings were done by the Colonel and were only used as checks on their dead reckoning course. Wind drift was calculated by using a ground speed and drift meter. In laying the course, wind drift was accounted for by the slight curve in the course followed. You will note that the plane was nearly on the original course when she turned left to sight the S.S. Westfalen. Overall, the flight from Bathurst to Natal took 15 hours, 55 minutes and only one course correction was necessary. T he Lindberghs used one of the second-setting watches when taking sextant sightings; the other second-setting watch was equipped with a dial graduated in degrees. With the equation of time set by means of the second-setting (hack) feature, Mrs. Lindbergh could read the Greenwich hour angle directly from the watch face to be translated into Longitude. The hour angle watch was the Colonel’s own invention and was made by the Longines Watch Company. The other watch was a Patek Phillipe with a power reserve indicator. Commander R.V.H. Weems, the father of aerial navigation, wrote in this same time period that the timepieces developed for navigation made accurate navigation positions commonplace. Thanks to radio time signals and quality timekeeping it was quite simple to find the correct instant of time within one or two seconds, amply close for practical navigation. Presentation Watch, c.1930 Agassiz Watch Co., S.A. Geneva, Switzerland This presentation watch was given to Col. Roscoe Turner by Pratt and Whitney Aircraft Co. Turner was the winner of many national and international air races in the 1920s and 30s. Roscoe Turner shown with his tiger Gilmore. Turner had a parachute and oxygen mask made for Gilmore. 32 Society of Military Horologists Chapter 143 © 2001 National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors, Inc. Reproduction prohibited without written permission. Pocket Chronograph, c.1930 Ulysses Nardin, S.A. Geneva, Switzerland Originally made for the German Navy, this clock was later appropriated by the Russians and used in the Soviet Navy. 34.1.2001 Submarine Operations Clock, c.1940 Kiengle-Uhrenfabriken, A.G. Schwennigen, Germany Taken from a German submarine captured at sea, this clock was used in the submarine communications room. 36.1.2001 Navigation Watch, c.1930 Longines Wittnauer Watch Company New York/Switzerland This deck watch was probably used for general timekeeping or as a comparing watch for navigation when set to a time signal. The watch has a 35-size case and dial with a 16-size movement. 50.1.2001 Society of Military Horologists Chapter 143 33 © 2001 National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors, Inc. Reproduction prohibited without written permission. Deck Watch, c.1930 Rolex, S.A. Geneva, Switzerland This deck watch was assigned to the H.M.S. Furious which was sunk in the Mediterranean Sea early in WWII. 32.1.2001 Navigation Watches American Waltham Watch Co. Waltham, MA These three watches were used for aircraft navigation. One was made for the U.S. Navy Bureau of Aeronautics and the other two for the U.S. Army Air Corps. c. 1928 Vanguard model, 23J, gold center wheel and gold settings. 24.1.2001 c. 1931 Vanguard model, 23J, six positions. 25.1.2001. c. 1927 Vanguard model, 23J, six positions. 26.1.2001. 34 Society of Military Horologists Chapter 143 © 2001 National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors, Inc. Reproduction prohibited without written permission. Sidereal Watch, c.1930 Waltham Watch Co. Waltham, MA Sidereal time is vital for navigation because it allows you to calculate the position of various stars. The right ascension of a star crossing the meridian is equal to the local sidereal time at that moment. This relation allows you to correctly orient a star map, if you know the local sidereal time. 13.1.2001 Chronometer Watch, c.1933 Elgin Watch Co. Elgin, Illinois This watch was made for the Bureau of Aeronautics, U.S. Navy, for air navigation in the 1930s. It has a 40-hour power reserve known by airmen as an up-down indicator. 12.1.2001 Society of Military Horologists Chapter 143 35 © 2001 National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors, Inc. Reproduction prohibited without written permission. Instrument Panel Clock, c.1938 Junghans Gebruder, A.G. Schramberg, Germany Used by the German Air Force in WWII, the clock can be manually set and wound from the back. 33.1.2001 Navigation Watch, c.1940 Seikosha Watch Company Japan Identical to elapsed time watches used by American pilots, this watch has a standard 12-hour dial, an inner 13-24 hour dial, a sweep second hand, and a 30-minute register dial. The markings on the back designate it for aviation use. 11.4.2001 36 Society of Military Horologists Chapter 143 © 2001 National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors, Inc. Reproduction prohibited without written permission. War in a Stringbag hile reading one of my favorite magazines, Aviation History, I was struck with the story of Britain’s remarkable bi-plane torpedo bomber of WWII, the Fairey Aviation Co. Swordfish. This airplane, although obsolete before its time, carried out some of the most daring assignments of the war. In essence, because of the professional courage and skilled airmanship of the pilots who flew them, the Stringbag, as it was known, became the symbol of British carrier aviation during the war. This torpedo bomber, mine-laying, reconnaissance, anti-submarine attack plane delivered crippling blows against enemy seapower again and again, sinking more than 350,000 tons of enemy shipping, destroying or damaging 30 enemy capital ships and more than a dozen UBoats. At the height of the war, 26 squadrons of the Royal Navy Fleet Air Arm were equipped with this durable plane. What was this plane and how does it relate to military horology? To begin, it was both a land plane, a carrier plane, and, with pontoons, a seaplane. On land it was flown from advanced bases with short runways. At sea, six British aircraft carriers housed 13 Swordfish squadrons. Equipped with pontoons, they flew reconnaissance missions from cruisers and battleships. It was 1933 when the British Admiralty asked Sir Richard Fairey to design an aircraft that would fulfill every naval requirement except air defense of the fleet. The assignments were many, and it specifically had to carry heavy loads of 2000 pounds of mines or torpedoes in a dive attack speed near 200 knots. The following year the first prototype was produced. It was test flown success- W Navigation Watch, c. 1937 Swiss made, 24-size, fully jeweled watch used on Stringbag flights. See following page for additional information. Society of Military Horologists Chapter 143 37 © 2001 National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors, Inc. Reproduction prohibited without written permission. fully and named the Swordfish. During the test period, while trying it out with all the different load requirements, a pilot remarked, “No housewife on a shopping spree could cram a wider variety of articles into her STRINGBAG!” And so, the name stuck. The production aircraft was a large bi-plane constructed of tubular steel with some duralumin but with a fabric covering over the aft fuselage, wings, and tail. Since it was to be based on aircraft carriers, its wings had to be foldable and its landing gear strong enough for pitching decks. The plane was powered with a 690-horsepower, 9-cylinder radial engine, driving a 3-bladed metal propeller. It had a cruising speed of 90 knots and a range of 600 miles. It was capable of carrying a 1600 pound, 18" diameter torpedo, a 1500 pound sea mine or equivalent weight in depth charges or bombs. For defense, it inadequately had a Vickers gun in the front cockpit, fired by the pilot through the propeller. The Lewis gun in the rear cockpit was fired by the air gunner or observer. The third crewman was the navigator who sat next to the pilot in the front cockpit. It was the navigator who used the unique watch mounted on the instrument panel. Since many missions were flown at night in pitch-dark conditions, navigation accuracy was extremely vital. For carrier operations, the plane took off, flew to the target, dropped its weapon, flew back to the carrier that had now moved to another location with no lights or radio signal. Of course the opportunities for getting “lead poisoning” were always present from enemy flak, fighter aircraft, and incendiary cannons. Then there were the other risks, from bad weather and barrage balloon cables to having your carrier sunk as you were about to land. But war is hell, isn’t it? The watch shown on page 37 was hand-held by the navigator. What is unique (I never saw another one like this) is the movable 360-degree register around the bezel. It is held in place by a spring-loaded knurled screw. According to one of the plane’s pilots, the 360 register was used in flying search patterns. That meant at the start point, the departure time was noted by the minute hand. The course was flown dependent on the minutes that elapsed. The next leg of the search would begin after an hour of flying time. The actual radius would be dependent on the flight speed. This type of search pattern was used primarily in finding the home carrier, downed airmen, and enemy ships. The designation on the back of the case is HS4, which means it is in the British Hydrographic Survey category four. Category one is chronometers; two, chronometer watches; three, deck watches; and four, dashboard watches, and on to HS11, general purpose wristwatches. 38 Society of Military Horologists Chapter 143 © 2001 National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors, Inc. Reproduction prohibited without written permission. An Operations Watch, c.1940 Adolph Lange and Sohne Glasshutte, Germany 19.1.2001 Submarine Operations Watch, c.1940 Adolph Lange and Sohne Glasshutte, Germany Known for its accurate timekeeping, this deck watch was used by the German Navy during World War II for submarine service. It has dials for the time, seconds, and power reserve. 18.1.2001 Society of Military Horologists Chapter 143 39 © 2001 National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors, Inc. Reproduction prohibited without written permission. Elapsed Time Chronograph, c.1940 Maker Unknown U.S.S.R. This chronograph was made for the Russian Air Force and used for aerial navigation during World War II. The watch has 19 jewels and two dials for measuring seconds and minutes. 44.1.2001 Chronometer, c.1940 Longines Wittnauer Watch Company New York/Switzerland These navigation chronometers were used on a large naval intercontinental aircraft. One watch was set on present local time and the other on Greenwich Mean Time. Alternately, when taking star sights, one watch would be set to sidereal time. Both watches have a power reserve of 36 hours. 51.1.2001 and 52.1.2001 40 Society of Military Horologists Chapter 143 © 2001 National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors, Inc. Reproduction prohibited without written permission. Pocket Watch, c.1940 Swiss Bigelow Kennard & Company-Retailer Boston, Massachusetts This 8-day watch was allegedly presented to John F. Kennedy upon his induction into the U.S. Navy Patrol Torpedo Boat Service. The case is engraved with his squadron number, PTBSQN8, and his initials. 48.1.2001 Pronotelemeter, c.1940 Seikosha Japan Watches such as this were used by the Japanese Navy on their warships to time their artillery shells. This, combined with the dye of the shells, gave them greater accuracy over increased distances. Each ship was issued shells with a different dye, so that each ship could identify their hits to better judge their accuracy. 9.1.2001 Society of Military Horologists Chapter 143 41 © 2001 National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors, Inc. Reproduction prohibited without written permission. Military Chronographs ne of the most versatile watches used in military operations is the chronograph. During WWII, the Navy used this type of watch for navigation and for gun control. Before the use of radar, the range of the large guns (cannons) would be determined by measuring the time interval between the firing and the explosion of the shell. In fact, to make certain it was the shells from a specific ship, each ship marked their shell explosion with a special dye. So, for example, your ship’s shells were red and the ship’s shells alongside were blue, you knew which ones came from your cannons and adjusted your sights accordingly. As aviators, the chronograph was our most valuable instrument. It could serve as a tachometer in determining speed over a given measured distance. It was also key in navigation when used in conjunction with a hand held Model J Dalton com- Dalton Model J computer. puter. Keeping track of elapsed time was particularly crucial when flying combat missions from aircraft carriers—before the development of the Global Positioning System. Imagine taking off, flying to the operations area, and engaging the enemy. Then return, to where you think the carrier is—which has moved from position A to position B on your chart. There was no radio beacon for homing in, just “dead reckoning navigation.” O Elapsed Time Aircraft Clock, c.1940 Hamilton Watch Co. Lancaster, PA This is a prototype of an elapsed time aircraft clock used on U.S. naval aircraft in WWII. 37.1.2001 42 Society of Military Horologists Chapter 143 © 2001 National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors, Inc. Reproduction prohibited without written permission. Hamilton Watch Co. Model 23, 16-size, 19 jewel timepiece with stopwatch. Dual Dial Chronograph, c. 1970 Hamilton Watch Co. The best instrument to do this was the elapsed time watch-clock fastened to the plane’s instrument panel. These clocks were usually of the eight-day type and were made by a number of makers. The one most favored by collectors is the Hamilton-Elgin four orbit clock made for both the Navy Bureau of Aeronautics and the Army Air Corps. These clocks were a cooperative project by both watch companies and were based on the Chronolite model first developed by the LeCoultre Watch Company of Switzerland. After Hamilton engineers made a number of design changes to modernize the movement, the result was an 8-day, 16-jewel elapsed time clock with a 24-hour dial and special chronograph and civil date features. The civil date was significant since many of these clocks were in aircraft used on the west side of the International Date Line in the Pacific. There were other watch companies that produced elapsed time clocks, notably Breitling, Waltham, and Elgin. These were 8-day, 16-jewel, 12-hour dial clocks designed for use as navigational instruments in aircraft. These clocks were less complicated in terms of their movements than the Elgin-Hamilton. However, they performed well in measuring elapsed time over a 12-hour period. The chronograph mechanism was entirely separate and recorded time intervals from one-fifth of a second to 60 minutes. Society of Military Horologists Chapter 143 43 © 2001 National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors, Inc. Reproduction prohibited without written permission. Pilot’s Watch, c. 1941 Longines Watch Company Switzerland In the 1930s, the Japanese Navy purchased several hundred of these wristwatches from the Longines Watch Company. These were issued to their elite aircraft carrier pilots and were worn by the pilots who bombed Pearl Harbor. These instruments had a “hack” mechanism to allow the pilots to set the exact time for takeoffs and for mission coordination. Also the center Weems dial could be set to exact time according to a radio signal. This watch is engraved on the back, “Japanese Naval Air Service.” Very few of these watches survived World War II. Navigation Sidereal Watch, c.1944 Elgin Watch Company Elgin, Illinois This 16-size watch is a B.W. Raymond model 590 housed in a 10K white gold case. It has 21 jewels, a gold center wheel, and gold settings. 7.4.2001 44 Society of Military Horologists Chapter 143 © 2001 National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors, Inc. Reproduction prohibited without written permission. The pocket watch chronograph was issued to both Navy and Air Corps navigators for use on multi-engine planes when conducting patrol flights and bombing raids. The model 23 made by Hamilton was a 19-jewel, 16-size timepiece. It was designed to keep conventional time or, by using the stopwatch, to measure elapsed time, Breitling, Longines, Minerva, Agassiz, and Wakmann also made chronographs for the U.S. Government in this same size and configuration. When used on military flights, each watch was placed in a small padded box or in a vibration-proof metal canister with easy access. The watches would be set by radio signal or chronometer before flight, since extended precision wasn’t usually demanded. However, when used in conjunction with a sextant to take solar or star sights, accuracy was necessary. Although it wasn’t considered a chronometer watch, its performance was more than adequate. The last chronograph we will discuss is the strap chronograph or wristwatch. Although these watches were not generally supplied to U.S. pilots as flight equipment, many pilots preferred using them, especially those watches that were designed as a flight calculator on its bezel and dial. These circular computers with the logarithmic scale of a slide rule were ideal for calculating elapsed time, rate of climb and descent, fuel consumption, rate of speed as well as other computations. German and Japanese pilots in WWII were issued the two register chronographs with a rotating bezel. Later, when NATO was formed, two register chronographs became standard. During war time, with radio silence and moving ships, navigation became a skill on which your life depended. With a chronograph in your hand or on your wrist and a flight direction calculator strapped to your leg, off you went to find the enemy. After the numbing fatigue of many sorties and flight at high altitude, the sheer terror of slashing air attacks or closing in on an enemy ship through a hail of cannon fire, you still had to go home. Now comes the search for your carrier, often times in the dark, and wondering whether you can find it and make it down . Next comes the thankful release of tension when you hook the landing wire, then tally who made it back and who didn’t. That’s what went into most every flight! And with you as your constant companion was your watch that helped to bring you back. Every watch that went to war deserves to be treated with respect and honor for the precision and durability it gave. Navigation Chronometer, c.1960 Rolex Watch Company Switzerland This four-dial chronograph is designated a Daytona model. It is used for air navigation. and the bezel can be set to determine plane speed. 3.4.2001 Society of Military Horologists Chapter 143 45 © 2001 National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors, Inc. Reproduction prohibited without written permission. Pocket Watch C.L. Guinand Le Locle, Switzerland Presented to William R. Bricker, this presentation watch has Bricker’s initials inscribed on the back of the case. The dial itself is engraved with the anchor and initials of the U.S. Navy. The case is solid gold, and the watch is configured as a split second sweep chronograph. 47.1.2001 Split Second Stop Watch, c. 1960 Maker Unknown England This is a conventional split second stopwatch used for timing one or two events. It was made for the British Navy and used by the fleet air arm. The three dials have different functions. The main dial is for split second timing, and the secondary dials are for registering minutes and running seconds. 53.1.2001 Deck Watch, c. 1980 Moscow First Watch Co. U.S.S.R. A sweep second Soviet Naval Deck Watch, this watch was used on board ship for navigation and general purpose timekeeping on the quarter deck. 45.1.2001 46 Society of Military Horologists Chapter 143 © 2001 National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors, Inc. Reproduction prohibited without written permission. Glossary of Terms Chronometer-originally a name for a metronome, but applied to a precision timekeeper in 1714 by Jeremy Thacker. Now a general name for a non-pendulum precision clock or a watch, although purists insist that it means a timepiece with a detent escapement, such as the marine chronometer. Makers of electronic instruments call their timekeeping devices electric chronometers. The Admiralty named high precision lever watches 'chronometers'. In Switzerland since 1951, no manufacturer has been allowed to call a watch a 'chronometer' unless it has obtained an official rating certificate from one of the testing bureaus.1 Deck Watch-a large precision watch (16 to 36 size) placed in a padded wooden box. After being compared with the ship's chronometer, it is carried on deck for use by the navigator when making his celestial observations.4 Detent-consists of the foot, detent spring, body or blade, the locking jewel pipe, and the horn. It is all made from one piece of steel. The detent is mounted to the underside of the upper train bridge.4 Detent Escapement or Chronometer Escapement-a detached and single beat escapement in that an impulse is received only during the swing of the balance wheel in one direction. When the balance wheel returns, on its return of "dumb vibration" it is done independently of the escapement.5 Fusee-a spiral conical grooved pulley of varying diameters designed to equalize the torque applied to the movement by the mainspring as it runs down and to which the chain is attached.4 Greenwich Mean Time-(GMT) the local mean time at the Greenwich meridian.4 Hack Chronometer-a standard two-day marine chronometer and, because of its condition, it is not deemed economically feasible to make it seaworthy. Such as instrument is just cleaned and brought to time and used as a portable auxiliary timepiece aboard ship.4 Lever-sset-type of hand-setting mechanism for watches, in which a lever is pulled out from side of dial, to shift the mechanism from winding to setting condition. This type of setting is favored by railroad watch inspection rules, because with it, it is impossible to leave watch in setting position accidentally, which could cause an error in timekeeping.3 Pivoted Detent-a detent which is mounted to a pivoted arbor and is controlled generally by a flat spiral spring. The action of this type of detent is similar to that of a chronometer spring detent. The difference is that it is pivoted and the coil spring causes it to return to a locked position after it has moved to unlock the escape wheel.4 Rack Lever Escapement-a lever escapement employing a toothed rack in place of the lever notch meshing with a pinion which replaces the normal balance staff. First Society of Military Horologists Chapter 143 47 © 2001 National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors, Inc. Reproduction prohibited without written permission. invented by Hautefeville in 1722, and by Peter Litherland in 1791.2 Sidereal Time-the standard of time used by astronomers which is measured by the motion of the vernal equinox or the time between two successive transits of a fixed star across the meridian. A sideral day is 3 mintues, 56.6 seconds faster than a mean solar day.4 Split Second Chronograph/Timer-a watch with two sweep second hands (one above the other), each of which can be operated independently of the other. Useful when timing two different events.5 Verge Escapement-the oldest known escapement. Although the inventor is inknown, there is a variation of it in the sketches of Leonardo Da Vinci. The arbor, which carries the balance and hairspring assembly, has two rectangular pallets, set at 90 degrees to 100 degrees to each other. The two pallets being spaced diametrical of each other act on the periphery of the saw-toothed shaped escape or crown wheel, as it is so often called. The crown wheel always has an uneven number of teeth (usually 13 or 15). The action of the balance is nearly attached. However, there is a slight recoil in the crown wheel.4 References 1.Bruton, Eric. Dictionary of Clocks and Watches. New York: Bonanza Books, 1963. 2.De Carle, Donald. Watch and Clock Encyclopedia. London: N.A.G. Press, Ltd., 1950. 3.McNeil, Donald S. Jewelers’ Dictionary. Radnor, PA: Jewelers’ Circular Keystone, 1947. 4.Whitney, Marvin. The Ship’s Chronometer. Cincinnati: AWI Press, 1985. 5.Whitney, Marvin. Military Timepieces. AWI Press, 1992. 48 Society of Military Horologists Chapter 143 © 2001 National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors, Inc. Reproduction prohibited without written permission. The Society of Military Horologists NAWCC Special Interest Chapter 143 President, W. Edward Christiansen, P.O. Box 1376, Newport, RI 02840 Secretary, Joseph Miller, RR 1, Box 548, Scotrun, PA 18355 © 2001 National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors, Inc. Reproduction prohibited without written permission.