Abstract
AbstractThis paper concerns the movement of the old navigational instrument, the compass, into the new situation of the aeroplane in the early part of the twentieth century. In order for the technology that had so long resided on ships or in the hand to continue to function in new contexts, a huge amount of work was required. Relationships were forged and made fraught, inventions were made to contest and succeed one another, new scientific and technical knowledge was produced. Throughout, the perceived nature of compasses and magnetic fields underwent subtle but significant shifts. Until recently histories dealing with the emergence of the aerocompass have largely black-boxed the technological changes, with only superficial treatment of issues lying beyond the compass itself.1 John Bradley's exploration of the feud between the Admiralty and military compass designers, and the sections in both Bradley's and A. E. Fanning's work on lawsuits over originality,2 go some way towards rectifying this imbalance. This paper extends that work further. It focuses on events in Britain, particularly those centred on two institutions, the Admiralty Compass Observatory at Ditton Park, Slough, and the Royal Aircraft Factory (later the Royal Aircraft Establishment) at Farnborough.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
History and Philosophy of Science,History
Reference2 articles.
1. “Compasses all awry”: the iron ship and the ambiguities of cultural authority in Victorian Britain;Winter;Victorian Studies,1994
2. The development of airborne dead-reckoning. Part 1: before 1940 – finding the wind;Ayliffe;Journal of Navigation,2001
Cited by
1 articles.
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