Hi everyone,
I recently bought a stash of goodies from an aged gentleman, and he is of the opinion that these items are from the aircraft world...
Any assistance with identification would be greatly appreciated.
Thank you.
Kind regards,
Nic
Hi everyone,
I recently bought a stash of goodies from an aged gentleman, and he is of the opinion that these items are from the aircraft world...
Any assistance with identification would be greatly appreciated.
Thank you.
Kind regards,
Nic
The middle one is obviously a flight computer of a design that I've not seen before. Real pretty.
If I'd have to venture a guess, the bottom is an oil tank off something.
Old airplanes, especially radial engines, used to need a lot of oil. It might be a fuel tank but it doesn't look right. Since it's a cylindrical shape, it was not something that would have been crammed inside the cowling of a small aircraft.
You wouldn't be interested in selling the flight computer?
Thanks for the info', Ron.
I'm expecting a call from a local museum in the new year about some of the items I've acquired, but I may consider selling a few of them privately too. Would you care to make me an offer?I have told the museum that I will speak to them first, so I can't give you an answer just yet though.
Kind regards,
Nic
Agreed as to its being pretty; NOT so sure it's a flight computer. Yes, the bottom of it has a flight computer-like scale. But it also has little nubs or something to allow it slide atop something. Looks to me like this is designed to be placed atop a chart and the two arms used to show the bearing of two different targets.
One aspect is the scale on the arms...it only goes up to 110, which is too slow for any aircraft in the past 80 years and too fast for surface vessels. Note that the "Flight Computer" side doesn't have an index mark.
Speaking of marks, note the Broad Arrow proof mark at the 9 o'clock position on the top view. This indicates it was produced as Crown property in Great Britain. The lettering at the 1-2 o'clock position seems to say "9 (degree) CDC Mark 1". CDC..."Course Direction Computer", or something along those lines?
Ron Wanttaja
This has some similarities to a Battenberg Course Indicator:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battenb...urse_indicator
Other options include an artillery or torpedo plotter. It has some similarities to a pelorus, too, but it doesn't have the sighting notches.
Ron Wanttaja
The tank looks a lot like the fuel tank on some very early (pre WWI) aircraft, if it's big enough (you don't say how big it is). The fitting could be anything. The other item is clearly some kind of navigation computer; it has "time" and "distance" scales on the bottom. An early wind drift computer, perhaps?