Information about Kerrison Predictor
The Kerrison Predictor was one of the first fully-automated anti-aircraft predictors, fire-control systems which would attempt to predict the correct aim at a plane based on simple inputs like the observed speed and angle to the target. Such devices had been used on ships for gunnery control for some time, and versions were also available for larger anti-aircraft guns, but the electromechanical Kerrison was the first to be fast enough to be used in the demanding high-speed low-altitude role.
The Kerrison Predictor was developed after it had been realized that modern aircraft on the attack flew too quickly for existing traversal systems on medium-sized guns to work. Smaller guns could be aimed by hand due to the short ranges at which they operated, allowing the operator to simply "guess" the required lead. Larger guns shot at targets so far away that the change in angle was low enough to calculate the required "lead" using a simple slide rule device in the gunsight.
However there was a middle range, served by the British Army's new Bofors 40 mm guns, where existing systems simply didn't work well. In this case the range was too far to "guess" the lead, but at the same time close enough that the angle changed so fast that the gunners were hard pressed simply turning the traversal handles, let alone trying to operate a calculating gunsight at the same time. Making matters worse was that these ranges were exactly where the Luftwaffe's dive bombers were attacking from, which were quickly proving to be a decisive weapon in the Blitzkrieg.
The Predictor solved the problem by doing all of the calculations mechanically through a complex system of gears. Inputs to its calculations included wind speed, gravity, ballistics of the gun and the rounds it fired, angle to the target in azimuth and altitude, and a user-input estimated speed. Some of these inputs were fed in via dials, which turned gearing inside the Predictor to calculate the range (from the change in angle and estimated speed) and direction of motion. The "output" of the device drove motors attached to the traversal and elevation gears of the otherwise unmodified Bofors gun. The gunners simply kept the gun loaded, while the three-man aimers simply had to point the Predictor, mounted on a large tripod, at the target.
The Predictor proved to be able to hit practically anything that flew in a straight line, and it was particularly effective against dive bombers. However it was also very complex, including over 1,000 precision parts and weighing over 500 pounds even though much of it was made of aluminum to reduce weight. With the demands of the RAF for almost all light metals and machinists, the Predictor was far too difficult for the Army to produce in any number.
Meanwhile in September 1940 the US Army's Coast Artillery Corps had become unhappy with their existing 37mm guns, and General Marshall asked the British to lend him four of their Bofors guns and Predictors for testing. They were more than impressed with both, and started plans to produce them in the USA. They obtained Imperial measurement engineering diagrams of the gun and Predictor from the British, passing the gun plans to Chrysler, and the Predictor to Sperry. Sperry was just starting production of their own horribly complex high-altitude system, the Sight, Computing, M7, and had no excess capacity to produce the new design as well. Instead they completed changes needed to US production and sent the plans back to the Army for production elsewhere.
To produce the Predictor, Singer Corporation was contracted in December 1940 to produce 1,500 a month to equip the Army's existing 37mm guns while production of the Bofors ramped up. Singer required massive changes in the company in order to ramp up production, including building new factories and the switching of a foundry from steel to aluminum. Production didn't start until January 1943, but the production line proved to be sound, and the entire order was filled for their Director, Antiaircraft, M5 by the middle of 1944. For a brief time some of the Army's Bofors guns were equipped with the Sperry M7, but these were replaced in the field as soon as M5's became available.
While the Predictor proved to be an excellent addition to the Bofors, it was not without its faults. The main problem was that the system required a fairly large electrical generator in order to drive the gun, increasing the logistics load in supplying the generators with fuel. Setting the system up was also a fairly complex task, and not something that could be done "on the fly". In the end they were used almost entirely for static emplacements, field units continuing to rely on their original iron sights or the simple Stiffkey-Stick sights that were introduced in late 1943.
With aircraft speeds increasing dramatically during the war, even the speed of the Kerrison Predictor proved lacking by the end. Nevertheless the Predictor demonstrated that effective gunnery required some sort of reasonably powerful computing support, and in 1944 Bell Labs started delivery of a new system based around an analog computer. The timing proved excellent. Late in the summer the Germans started attacking London with the V-1 flying bomb, which flew at high speeds at low altitudes. After a month of limited success against them, every available anti-aircraft gun was moved to the strip of land on the approach to London, and the new sights proved to be more than capable against them. Daytime attacks were soon abandoned.
Long after the war, US M5's started appearing in surplus shops in the late 1950s. John Whitney purchased one (and later a Sperry M7) and connected the electrical outputs to servos controlling the positioning of small lit targets and light bulbs. He then modified the "mathematics" of the system to move the targets in various mathematically controlled ways, a technique he referred to as incremental drift. As the power of the systems grew they eventually evolved into what is today known as motion control photography, a widely used technique in special effects filming.
Altitude is the elevation of an object from a known level or datum (plural: data). Common data are mean sea level and the surface of the WGS-84 geoid, used by GPS.
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The Kerrison Predictor was developed after it had been realized that modern aircraft on the attack flew too quickly for existing traversal systems on medium-sized guns to work. Smaller guns could be aimed by hand due to the short ranges at which they operated, allowing the operator to simply "guess" the required lead. Larger guns shot at targets so far away that the change in angle was low enough to calculate the required "lead" using a simple slide rule device in the gunsight.
However there was a middle range, served by the British Army's new Bofors 40 mm guns, where existing systems simply didn't work well. In this case the range was too far to "guess" the lead, but at the same time close enough that the angle changed so fast that the gunners were hard pressed simply turning the traversal handles, let alone trying to operate a calculating gunsight at the same time. Making matters worse was that these ranges were exactly where the Luftwaffe's dive bombers were attacking from, which were quickly proving to be a decisive weapon in the Blitzkrieg.
The Predictor solved the problem by doing all of the calculations mechanically through a complex system of gears. Inputs to its calculations included wind speed, gravity, ballistics of the gun and the rounds it fired, angle to the target in azimuth and altitude, and a user-input estimated speed. Some of these inputs were fed in via dials, which turned gearing inside the Predictor to calculate the range (from the change in angle and estimated speed) and direction of motion. The "output" of the device drove motors attached to the traversal and elevation gears of the otherwise unmodified Bofors gun. The gunners simply kept the gun loaded, while the three-man aimers simply had to point the Predictor, mounted on a large tripod, at the target.
The Predictor proved to be able to hit practically anything that flew in a straight line, and it was particularly effective against dive bombers. However it was also very complex, including over 1,000 precision parts and weighing over 500 pounds even though much of it was made of aluminum to reduce weight. With the demands of the RAF for almost all light metals and machinists, the Predictor was far too difficult for the Army to produce in any number.
Meanwhile in September 1940 the US Army's Coast Artillery Corps had become unhappy with their existing 37mm guns, and General Marshall asked the British to lend him four of their Bofors guns and Predictors for testing. They were more than impressed with both, and started plans to produce them in the USA. They obtained Imperial measurement engineering diagrams of the gun and Predictor from the British, passing the gun plans to Chrysler, and the Predictor to Sperry. Sperry was just starting production of their own horribly complex high-altitude system, the Sight, Computing, M7, and had no excess capacity to produce the new design as well. Instead they completed changes needed to US production and sent the plans back to the Army for production elsewhere.
To produce the Predictor, Singer Corporation was contracted in December 1940 to produce 1,500 a month to equip the Army's existing 37mm guns while production of the Bofors ramped up. Singer required massive changes in the company in order to ramp up production, including building new factories and the switching of a foundry from steel to aluminum. Production didn't start until January 1943, but the production line proved to be sound, and the entire order was filled for their Director, Antiaircraft, M5 by the middle of 1944. For a brief time some of the Army's Bofors guns were equipped with the Sperry M7, but these were replaced in the field as soon as M5's became available.
While the Predictor proved to be an excellent addition to the Bofors, it was not without its faults. The main problem was that the system required a fairly large electrical generator in order to drive the gun, increasing the logistics load in supplying the generators with fuel. Setting the system up was also a fairly complex task, and not something that could be done "on the fly". In the end they were used almost entirely for static emplacements, field units continuing to rely on their original iron sights or the simple Stiffkey-Stick sights that were introduced in late 1943.
With aircraft speeds increasing dramatically during the war, even the speed of the Kerrison Predictor proved lacking by the end. Nevertheless the Predictor demonstrated that effective gunnery required some sort of reasonably powerful computing support, and in 1944 Bell Labs started delivery of a new system based around an analog computer. The timing proved excellent. Late in the summer the Germans started attacking London with the V-1 flying bomb, which flew at high speeds at low altitudes. After a month of limited success against them, every available anti-aircraft gun was moved to the strip of land on the approach to London, and the new sights proved to be more than capable against them. Daytime attacks were soon abandoned.
Long after the war, US M5's started appearing in surplus shops in the late 1950s. John Whitney purchased one (and later a Sperry M7) and connected the electrical outputs to servos controlling the positioning of small lit targets and light bulbs. He then modified the "mathematics" of the system to move the targets in various mathematically controlled ways, a technique he referred to as incremental drift. As the power of the systems grew they eventually evolved into what is today known as motion control photography, a widely used technique in special effects filming.
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Anti-aircraft can refer to:
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- Anti-aircraft warfare, any method of engaging military aircraft in combat from the ground.
- Anti-Aircraft (arcade game), a 1975 video game by Atari Inc..
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fire-control system is a computer, often mechanical, which is designed to assist a weapon system in hitting its target. It performs the same task as a human firing a weapon, for example, an archer or rifleman, but attempts to do so faster and more accurately.
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prediction is a statement or claim that a particular event will occur in the future in more certain terms than a forecast. The etymology of this word is Latin (from præ- "before" plus dicere "to say").
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In engineering, electromechanics combines the sciences of electromagnetism of electrical engineering and mechanics. Mechatronics is the discipline of engineering that combines mechanics, electronics and information technology (software engineering).
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slide rule (often nicknamed a "slipstick"[1]) is a mechanical analog computer, consisting of at least two finely divided scales (rules), most often a fixed outer pair and a movable inner one, with a sliding window called the cursor.
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The British Army is the land armed forces branch of the British Armed Forces. It came into being with unification of the governments and armed forces of England and Scotland into the United Kingdom of Great Britain in 1707.
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Bofors 40 mm/L60. This example includes the British-designed Stiffkey Sight, being operated by the aimer standing to the right of the loader (turned sideways). It operates the trapeze seen above the sights, moving the sights to adjust for lead.
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Deutsche Luftwaffe or Luftwaffe (German: air force, literally "Air Weapon", pronounced lufft-va-fa, IPA:
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A dive bomber is a bomber aircraft that dives directly at its targets in order to provide greater accuracy and limit the exposure to and effectiveness of anti-aircraft fire.
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Blitzkrieg (German, literally Lightning war or flash war) is a popular name for an offensive operational-level military doctrine which involves an initial bombardment followed by the
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Ballistics (gr. ba'llein, "throw") is the science of mechanics that deals with the motion, behavior, and effects of projectiles, especially bullets, gravity bombs, rockets, or the like; the science or art of designing and accelerating projectiles so as to achieve a
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- For other uses see Altitude (disambiguation)
Altitude is the elevation of an object from a known level or datum (plural: data). Common data are mean sea level and the surface of the WGS-84 geoid, used by GPS.
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Tripod is a word generally used to refer to a three-legged object, generally one used as a platform of some sort, and comes from the Greek tripous, meaning "three feet".
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Aluminium (IPA: /ˌæljʊˈmɪniəm/, /ˌæljəˈmɪniəm/) or aluminum (IPA: /əˈluːmɪnəm/
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Royal Air Force (RAF) is the air force branch of the British Armed Forces. The RAF was formed on 1 April 1918 and has since taken a significant role in British military history since then, playing a large part in World War II and in conflicts such as the recent war in Iraq.
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The United States Army is the largest and oldest branch of the armed forces of the United States. Like all armies, it has the primary responsibility for land-based military operations.
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Chrysler LLC
Private
Founded June 6, 1925
Headquarters Auburn Hills, Michigan, USA
Key people Robert Nardelli, Chairman & CEO
Thomas W. LaSorda, Vice-Chairman & President
Jim Press, Vice-Chairman & President
Phil Murtaugh CEO of Asian Operations
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Private
Founded June 6, 1925
Headquarters Auburn Hills, Michigan, USA
Key people Robert Nardelli, Chairman & CEO
Thomas W. LaSorda, Vice-Chairman & President
Jim Press, Vice-Chairman & President
Phil Murtaugh CEO of Asian Operations
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Sperry may refer to:
Persons:
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Persons:
- Armstrong Sperry (1897-1976), American author and illustrator
- Brett Sperry (contemporary), American video game designer
- Carlos A.
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Singer Corporation is a United States of America manufacturer of sewing machines, first established as I.M. Singer & Co. in 1851 by Isaac Merrit Singer with New York lawyer Edward Clark.
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Logistics is the art and science of managing and controlling the flow of goods, energy, information and other resources like products, services and people from the source of production to the marketplace.
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Bell Laboratories (also known as Bell Labs and formerly known as AT&T Bell Laboratories and Bell Telephone Laboratories) is part of the research and development organization of Alcatel-Lucent and previously the United States Bell System.
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Norden bombsight was a highly sophisticated optical/mechanical analog computer used by the United States Army Air Force during World War II, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War to aid the pilot of a bomber aircraft in dropping bombs accurately.
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London
Canary Wharf is the centre of London's modern office towers
London shown within England
Coordinates:
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Constituent country England
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Canary Wharf is the centre of London's modern office towers
London shown within England
Coordinates:
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Constituent country England
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V-1 (German: Vergeltungswaffe 1) was the first guided missile used in war and the forerunner of today's cruise missile. The V-1 was developed at Peenemünde by the German Luftwaffe during the Second World War.
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John Whitney, Sr. (April 8, 1917 - September 22, 1995) was an American animator, composer and inventor, widely considered to be one of the fathers of computer animation.
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Servo may refer to:
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- Servomechanism, or servo, a device used to provide control of a desired operation through the use of feedback
- Servo drive, a special electric amplifier used to power electric servo motors
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Motion control photography is a special effects technique used in film that enables precise repetition of camera movement, usually to facilitate special effects photography.
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special effects (a.k.a. SFX or SPFX). In modern films, special effects are usually used to alter previously-filmed elements by adding, removing or enhancing objects within the scene.
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