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'''Invention and the Navy''' was a paper read at a Meeting of the Institute of Patentees and Inventors by [[Hugh Clausen]], O.B.E., I.S.O., B.Sc.(Eng.), formerly Senior Principal Scientific Officer at the Admiralty, at the Royal Society of Arts on Friday, [[30 January]], [[1970]] reprinted with acknowledgements. In the chair was Rear-Admiral [[Frank Elliott]], O.B.E., who was Gunnery | '''Invention and the Navy''' was a paper read at a Meeting of the Institute of Patentees and Inventors by [[Hugh Clausen]], O.B.E., I.S.O., B.Sc.(Eng.), formerly Senior Principal Scientific Officer at the Admiralty, at the Royal Society of Arts on Friday, [[30 January]], [[1970]] reprinted with acknowledgements. In the chair was Rear-Admiral [[Frank Elliott]], O.B.E., who was Gunnery Officer of [[H.M.S. Benbow (1912)|H.M.S. ''Benbow'']] throughout the Kaiser's war. Mr. Clausen served as a Lieutenant R.N.V.R. in that ship from 1915 to 1919: he and Lieut.-Commander Elliott earned their O.B.E.s for improvements in gunnery fire control gear. The talk is reproduced in ''[[The Naval Review]]'', 1970-4, pp. 330-337. | ||
==Speech== | ==Speech== | ||
THE matters I have to deal with, Invention and the Navy, cover such a vast field that they could not possibly be dealt with effectively in a single paper. I propose to survey very | THE matters I have to deal with, Invention and the Navy, cover such a vast field that they could not possibly be dealt with effectively in a single paper. I propose to survey very briefly a number of inventions intimately associated with the Navy, especially some of those which have come within my personal knowledge; to make some comment upon Naval attitudes to invention; and last but not least, to examine the nature of invention and its relationship to design. | ||
The Navy has always shown a strangely mixed attitude towards new inventions. In olden days there was, of course, less scope, and H.M.S. ''Victory'', for example, refitting after Trafalgar, could have found pretty nearly all the facilities needed - except perhaps the size of the dry dock - in any of H.M. Dockyards of a hundred years earlier, just as ship's companies of those earlier days could have sailed and fought ships of a century later in time , with very litt!e practice. | The Navy has always shown a strangely mixed attitude towards new inventions. In olden days there was, of course, less scope, and H.M.S. ''Victory'', for example, refitting after Trafalgar, could have found pretty nearly all the facilities needed - except perhaps the size of the dry dock - in any of H.M. Dockyards of a hundred years earlier, just as ship's companies of those earlier days could have sailed and fought ships of a century later in time , with very litt!e practice. | ||
===Slow, sure development=== | ===Slow, sure development=== | ||
Visiting HMS | Visiting HMS Victory in Portsmouth Yard I have always come away with a better impression of good design and fitness for purpose than I have derived from any of my countless visits to modern ships of war. Progress was slow, and the ships and their equipment were the result of many years of development to the stage when they were, within the state of the art of the time, finished and perfect, and there was little or nothing that could be usefully added or taken away. | ||
I have always come away with a better | |||
impression of good design and fitness for | An early naval innovator, Admiral Vernon (1684-1757), after whom the Navy's Torpedo and Electrical Experimental Establishment was named, was famous for initiating new sailing rigs and tactics, but is best known for his institution of the rum ration, or grog, now apparently being done away with. I suppose all new inventions become obsolete sooner or later! Even the good ones. | ||
purpose | |||
my countless visits to modern ships of war. | In Nelson's time there were, of course, excellent (for the time) instruments, telescopes, sextants and other navigational instruments available, but things were, as a whole, left to the individual inventor. | ||
Progress was slow, and the ships and their | |||
equipment were the result of many years of | ==Harrison== | ||
development to the stage when they were, | A good example is the well known story of the ship's chronometer. The Admiralty, seeking a means for finding a ship's position at sea, had for long offered an award of 20,000 pounds, a vast sum in those days, part of which, after long shifts and struggles to get out of it, was awarded to Harrison, not an instrument maker but a carpenter by trade, whose marvelous chronometers are still keeping good time in the National Maritime Museum at Greenwich. He designed and made them himself, and the Government, thinking perhaps that there | ||
was some magic about it, withheld the award until a successful copy had been made by someone else. This was done by Larcombe Kendall, a well known watchmaker of the time. | |||
finished and perfect, and there was little or | |||
nothing that could be usefully added or | This, like the contemporary work of James Watt with his steam engine, was a personal effort as were the later developments of the chronometer, and many other things. The idea of combining such facilities as were available in a concerted effort, with adequate support, is a thing of very recent growth, since my own time in the engineering world, in fact. Every advance was formerly the result of individual effort rather than organised collaboration. This is still largely the case, as can be seen by more recent examples which I will deal with later. Even now, large research establishments often depend for their success on the luck of having one or two men of real genius, not by any means the head man, to inspire and guide the rat, and show how to express an inventor's ideas in practical ironmongery. | ||
taken away. | |||
An early naval innovator, Admiral | The use of steam - and later of internal combustion engines - for propelling ships can hardly be called an invention, though innumerable inventions were involved in the development of the marine engine to its wonderful state of perfection in the 1900s, More it was overtaken by the steam turbine. This latter, foreshadowed by Hero of Alexandria about zero A.D., was the result of many inventions by many different men, each making his contribution, and the balance of importance between the 'invention' and the means for carrying the idea into successful effect has never been simple. It is perhaps of increasing complexity now, with the increasing degree of specialization, and separation of the different functions and activities concerned. The Patent Office, I believe, will accept for a patent either a new principle, or a new method of carrying an established principle into effect, provided that the means for carrying it into effect are fully declared in both cases. | ||
Vernon (1684-1757), after whom | |||
Torpedo and Electrical Experimental | ==The locomotive torpedo== | ||
Establishment was named, was famous for | |||
initiating new sailing rigs and tactics, but | |||
is best known for his institution of the rum | |||
ration, or grog, now apparently being done | |||
away with. I suppose all new inventions | |||
become | |||
good ones. | |||
In Nelson's | |||
excellent (for the time) instruments, | |||
sextants and other navigational | |||
instruments available, but things were, as | |||
a whole, left to the individual inventor | |||
Harrison | |||
A good example is the well known story | |||
seeking a means for finding a | |||
at sea, had for long offered an award of | |||
which, after long shifts and struggles to | |||
get out of it, was awarded to Harrison, | |||
not an instrument maker but a carpenter | |||
by trade, whose | |||
are still keeping good time in the National | |||
Maritime Museum at Greenwich. He designed | |||
and made them himself, and the | |||
Government, thinking perhaps that there | |||
was some magic about it, withheld the | |||
award until a successful copy had been | |||
made by someone else. This was done by | |||
Larcombe Kendall, a well known watchmaker | |||
of the time. | |||
This, like the contemporary work of | |||
James Watt with his steam engine, was a | |||
personal effort as were the later developments | |||
of the chronometer, and many other | |||
things. The idea of combining such facilities | |||
as were available in a concerted effort, with | |||
adequate support, is a thing of very recent | |||
growth, since my own time in the engineering | |||
world, in fact. Every advance was | |||
formerly the result of | |||
rather than organised collaboration. This | |||
is still largely the case, as can be seen by | |||
more recent examples which I will deal with | |||
later. Even now, large research establishments | |||
often depend for their success on the | |||
luck of having one or two men of real | |||
genius, not by any means the head man, | |||
to inspire and guide the rat, and show how | |||
to express an inventor's ideas in practical | |||
ironmongery. | |||
The use of steam - and later of internal | |||
combustion engines - for propelling ships | |||
can hardly be called an invention, though | |||
innumerable inventions were involved in | |||
the development of the marine engine to | |||
its wonderful state of perfection in the | |||
of Alexandria about zero A.D., was the | |||
result of many inventions by many different | |||
men, each making his | |||
balance of importance between the ' | |||
and the means for carrying | |||
into successful effect has never been simple. | |||
It is perhaps of increasing complexity now, | |||
with the | |||
and separation | |||
and activities concerned. The Patent | |||
I believe, will accept for a patent either a | |||
new principle, or a new method of carrying | |||
an established principle into effect, provided | |||
that the means for carrying it into | |||
effect are fully declared in both cases. | |||
The locomotive torpedo | |||
The torpedo is a naval example of the | The torpedo is a naval example of the | ||
complexity of the development of an invention. | complexity of the development of an invention. | ||
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The propulsion system where, in the | The propulsion system where, in the | ||
older cold torpedo the cylinders were water | older cold torpedo the cylinders were water | ||
jacketed to prevent | jacketed to prevent them from freezing up | ||
whilst in the heater torpedo the water | whilst in the heater torpedo the water | ||
jackets were to prevent them from burning | jackets were to prevent them from burning | ||
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Austrian patronage at Fiume led to two, | Austrian patronage at Fiume led to two, | ||
both originally almost identical, British and | both originally almost identical, British and | ||
German torpedoes, the latter being christened | |||
the ' | the 'Schwarzkopf' to distinguish it from | ||
the Whitehead. The efforts of Whitehead | the Whitehead. The efforts of Whitehead | ||
and Obry, a famous Austrian | and Obry, a famous Austrian engineer, to | ||
keep the controlling gear secret whilst at | keep the controlling gear secret whilst at | ||
the same time trying to | the same time trying to sell the idea to | ||
navies which insisted on both internal full | navies which insisted on both internal full | ||
knowledge combined with external secrecy | knowledge combined with external secrecy | ||
became a bit awkward at times. | became a bit awkward at times. | ||
Gyro compass | |||
The gyro | ==Gyro compass== | ||
The gyro compass provided a vast field | |||
for patents and inventions, for rivalries and | for patents and inventions, for rivalries and | ||
law suits | law suits between various claimants. The | ||
directional gyro had been used in torpedos | directional gyro had been used in torpedos | ||
to control a short run, but to give a true | to control a short run, but to give a true | ||
North continuously for navigation was | North continuously for navigation was | ||
another story, and demanded | another story, and demanded much more | ||
effort. The gunnery master gyro, to give a | effort. The gunnery master gyro, to give a | ||
real precision azimuth control was even | real precision azimuth control was even | ||
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reminiscent of those around the philosopher's | reminiscent of those around the philosopher's | ||
stone of The Middle Ages. | stone of The Middle Ages. | ||
The first one used in the British Navy | The first one used in the British Navy | ||
was the German Anschutz, originally of | was the German Anschutz, originally of | ||
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were carried to a very high degree of | were carried to a very high degree of | ||
perfection in later marks in Germany, we | perfection in later marks in Germany, we | ||
were not satisfied | were not satisfied with them, and they were | ||
all replaced by American Sperry compasses | all replaced by American Sperry compasses, | ||
first of American manufacture and later | first of American manufacture and later | ||
made here under licence. I was | made here under licence. I was shipmates | ||
with both types in the first world war, and | with both types in the first world war, and | ||
for some time was responsible for their | for some time was responsible for their | ||
maintenance. | maintenance. | ||
The Brown gyro compass was tried by | The Brown gyro compass was tried by | ||
the Navy but never widely adopted. Brawn | the Navy but never widely adopted. Brawn | ||
also produced a 'slow wanderer' | also produced a 'slow wanderer' compass, | ||
for real precision work, with an occasional | for real precision work, with an occasional | ||
check from a north seeker. Great | check from a north seeker. Great hopes | ||
were placed on these for gunnery controls | were placed on these for gunnery controls | ||
at the time, but I do not think that they | at the time, but I do not think that they | ||
got very far, though the principles had | got very far, though the principles had | ||
useful applications elsewhere. S. G. Brown | useful applications elsewhere. S. G. Brown | ||
was a | was a remarkable man whom I knew fairly | ||
well ; quite a genius in fact, in invention and | |||
design. He had been a laboratory assistant | design. He had been a laboratory assistant | ||
to Professor Perry, who was then, | to Professor Perry, who was then, with | ||
Lord Kelvin, our national gyro expert. He | Lord Kelvin, our national gyro expert. He | ||
not only invented his | not only invented his M type of sensitive | ||
element and follow up system, he designed | element and follow up system, he designed | ||
it in all its detail, and built it | it in all its detail, and built it himself, with | ||
his own hands. There was some lovely | his own hands. There was some lovely | ||
design work in it, and in the stepper motors | design work in it, and in the stepper motors | ||
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was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society. | was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society. | ||
Here is a very particular case of the | Here is a very particular case of the | ||
balance between the | balance between the inventor and the | ||
designer. It should be clearly understood | designer. It should be clearly understood | ||
by all budding inventors that even when | by all budding inventors that even when | ||
they have got their final specification filed | they have got their final specification filed | ||
this is only the beginning. The detail design | this is only the beginning. The detail design | ||
and manufacture, on which success | and manufacture, on which success will | ||
ultimately depend, may both need equal or | ultimately depend, may both need equal or | ||
higher mental and intellectual qualities than | higher mental and intellectual qualities than | ||
the 'invention'. | the 'invention'. | ||
I can illustrate | |||
I can illustrate this by another inventor | |||
in the gyro compass field, and as those | in the gyro compass field, and as those | ||
concerned are now dead I can give names. | concerned are now dead I can give names. | ||
Sir James Henderson who, when I joined | Sir James Henderson who, when I joined | ||
the Admiralty, was Adviser on | the Admiralty, was Adviser on gyroscopic | ||
equipment, was a brilliant physicist. His | equipment, was a brilliant physicist. His | ||
analytical and mathematical work was often | |||
really brilliant, but he had no sense of | |||
mechanical design at all. He also had the | mechanical design at all. He also had the | ||
bad luck of being unable to recruit first | bad luck of being unable to recruit first | ||
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out his ideas for him in the way of detail | out his ideas for him in the way of detail | ||
design will always be in trouble. He need | design will always be in trouble. He need | ||
not, as | not, as Harrison and S. G. Brown did, make | ||
the whole trial gear himself personally but, | the whole trial gear himself personally but, | ||
if he is a real 'inventor', he must be able | if he is a real 'inventor', he must be able | ||
to advance the state of the art - if need | to advance the state of the art - if need | ||
be - so as to enable it to carry out | be - so as to enable it to carry out his | ||
ideas. | ideas. | ||
Invention is not the end | Invention is not the end | ||
If he has not the | If he has not the technical ability to do | ||
this there are courses open to him. He can | this there are courses open to him. He can | ||
get down to it, learn from others, and try | get down to it, learn from others, and try | ||
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due sense of humility. Another way is to try | due sense of humility. Another way is to try | ||
to find some other man with the necessary | to find some other man with the necessary | ||
abilities | abilities who is equally keen on the idea, | ||
and collaborate with him on a | and collaborate with him on a partnership | ||
basis. The idea may be brilliant, but the | basis. The idea may be brilliant, but the | ||
quality of the product | quality of the product depends on the detail | ||
design, and on the ability to embody in | design, and on the ability to embody in | ||
this, to an | this, to an optimum extent, the results of | ||
experiment and trial, and service use. The | experiment and trial, and service use. The | ||
place where quality is injected into the | place where quality is injected into the | ||
product is on the drawing board, and the | product is on the drawing board, and the | ||
instrument used for injecting it is a pencil. | instrument used for injecting it is a pencil. | ||
Who is it who | Who is it who holds - or guides in detail | ||
- this pencil? There is a grave lack of a | - this pencil? There is a grave lack of a | ||
tradition of really good precision engineering | tradition of really good precision engineering | ||
design (on | design (on which everything else | ||
depends) in our higher educational, industrial, | depends) in our higher educational, industrial, | ||
and managerial circles. | and managerial circles. | ||
I was never actively concerned in | |||
design | I was never actively concerned in the | ||
design of the gyro compass, but I was very | |||
dependent on it to provide the stable | dependent on it to provide the stable | ||
azimuth as a basis for the gunnery fire | azimuth as a basis for the gunnery fire | ||
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system was perhaps an even more complex | system was perhaps an even more complex | ||
battle ground of rival personalities, systems, | battle ground of rival personalities, systems, | ||
inventions and patents than | inventions and patents than the gyro compass. | ||
The combination of the two widens | The combination of the two widens | ||
the field still further. | the field still further. | ||
Like any other aspect of naval activity, | Like any other aspect of naval activity, | ||
its weapons give wide | its weapons give wide scope for invention. | ||
Naval guns were, I believe, used at the | Naval guns were, I believe, used at the | ||
Battle of Sluys, in Edward | Battle of Sluys, in Edward III's time. They | ||
must have been pretty crude, but development | must have been pretty crude, but development | ||
has gone on, at varying speed, but | has gone on, at varying speed, but | ||
without much real change until Victorian | without much real change until Victorian | ||
engineering development made great strides | engineering development made great strides | ||
possible. The leaders here were those great | |||
engineers Joseph Whitworth and | engineers Joseph Whitworth and William | ||
Armstrong, who subsequently combined. | Armstrong, who subsequently combined. | ||
This led to the very great extension of the | This led to the very great extension of the | ||
ranges at which guns could be effectively | ranges at which guns could be effectively | ||
used, and to means for increasing this | used, and to means for increasing this | ||
effectiveness. The fixed mounting guns of | |||
land artillery could be used effectively at | land artillery could be used effectively at | ||
very long ranges, but firing from a moving | very long ranges, but firing from a moving | ||
ship at a moving target was quite another | ship at a moving target was quite another | ||
story. | story. | ||
Fire control | |||
It was | ==Fire control== | ||
It was in 1900 that Arthur H. Pollen, a | |||
very energetic and versatile man of many | very energetic and versatile man of many | ||
activities and interests, was a visitor as a | activities and interests, was a visitor as a | ||
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range of the guns, at a stationary target. | range of the guns, at a stationary target. | ||
He was convinced that this range could be | He was convinced that this range could be | ||
vastly | vastly increased by the use of an accurate | ||
control system, and he badgered the | control system, and he badgered the | ||
authorities unmercifully to do something | authorities unmercifully to do something | ||
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ships at various times between 1902 and | ships at various times between 1902 and | ||
1914. | 1914. | ||
He had recruited a very powerful design | He had recruited a very powerful design | ||
team, including Isherwood and Landstad, | team, including Isherwood and Landstad, | ||
both of whom I knew later. They produced | both of whom I knew later. They produced | ||
a complete fire control system part of which | a complete fire control system part of which | ||
was fitted in one | was fitted in one of the Battle Squadrons of | ||
the Grand Fleet. It was far superior in | the Grand Fleet. It was far superior in | ||
execution - though with some disadvantages | execution - though with some disadvantages | ||
in use - to the somewhat later Dreyer | in use - to the somewhat later Dreyer | ||
fire control system fitted in the other Grand | |||
Fleet ships. This was produced by the | Fleet ships. This was produced by the | ||
London firm of Elliott Bros., where Mr. | London firm of Elliott Bros., where Mr. | ||
(later Sir Keith) | (later Sir Keith) Elphinstone collaborated | ||
with Commander (later Admiral) Dreyer In | with Commander (later Admiral) Dreyer In | ||
the development. | the development. | ||
The difficulties and | |||
The difficulties and squabbles between the | |||
protagonists of these two systems, is a sorry | protagonists of these two systems, is a sorry | ||
story which I cannot go into in detail, | story which I cannot go into in detail, | ||
though it constitutes an important chapter | though it constitutes an important chapter | ||
in the history of Invention and the Navy. | in the history of Invention and the Navy. | ||
Lack of | Lack of collaboration put back the development | ||
of precision | of precision naval gunnery for many | ||
years. It would have been much better to | years. It would have been much better to | ||
have given full scope for | have given full scope for the development | ||
of both, in fair competition, if that were | of both, in fair competition, if that were | ||
possible. | possible. | ||
progress, and many of the now | I suppose one of the reasons for slow | ||
progress, and many of the now apparently | |||
unnecessary difficulties, was that there was, | unnecessary difficulties, was that there was, | ||
at the time, no real competent authority - | at the time, no real competent authority - | ||
in the professional sense - to deal | in the professional sense - to deal with | ||
technical development. 'This led to such | technical development. 'This led to such | ||
roundabout ways - or | roundabout ways - or perhaps short cuts - | ||
as Mr. Pollen writing desperate letters to | as Mr. Pollen writing desperate letters to | ||
Winston Churchill, then First Lord of the | |||
Admiralty, pleading for better facilities for | Admiralty, pleading for better facilities for | ||
trials of his fire control system. | trials of his fire control system. The lack | ||
of channels for the development of new | of channels for the development of new | ||
ideas, and the resulting frustrations and | ideas, and the resulting frustrations and | ||
difficulties of personal effort appears | difficulties of personal effort appears again | ||
and again. An earlier example was the | and again. An earlier example was the | ||
'battle of the guns' fought between Armstrong | 'battle of the guns' fought between Armstrong | ||
and Whitworth, largely carried on | and Whitworth, largely carried on in | ||
letters published in The Times in | letters published in The Times in the 1860s | ||
and | and 70s. | ||
A similar lack of what one | |||
professional competence in positions | A similar lack of what one might call | ||
authority appears in the story of the | professional competence in positions of | ||
authority appears in the story of the ill-fated | |||
HMS Captain, a steam driven turret | HMS Captain, a steam driven turret | ||
ship of unusual design with an extremely | ship of unusual design with an extremely | ||
low freeboard, to which the | low freeboard, to which the Admiralty | ||
authorities also insisted on having a | authorities also insisted on having a complete | ||
rig of heavy masts and sails. She | rig of heavy masts and sails. She | ||
was lost in a storm, with few, if any | was lost in a storm, with few, if any | ||
survivors: a fate | survivors: a fate which a little hindsight | ||
showed to have been inevitable. | showed to have been inevitable. | ||
Secrecy | |||
One instance of the kind of | ==Secrecy== | ||
which | One instance of the kind of difficulties | ||
which crop up in the development of naval | |||
material is the case of what became known | material is the case of what became known | ||
as the Henderson firing gear. A very | as the Henderson firing gear. A very able | ||
Austrian engineer, Olbry, whom we have | Austrian engineer, Olbry, whom we have | ||
met before, had developed an | met before, had developed an artificial | ||
horizon, to give the instant of firing when | horizon, to give the instant of firing when | ||
the horizon was obscured. This was seen, | the horizon was obscured. This was seen, | ||
in Austria, by an Admiralty representative | in Austria, by an Admiralty representative | ||
(Commander Dreyer, I | (Commander Dreyer, I believe) and recommended | ||
for adoption. Obry, however, | for adoption. Obry, however, | ||
insisted that as the mechanism was secret | insisted that as the mechanism was secret | ||
it could only be supplied in a sealed case, | it could only be supplied in a sealed case, | ||
to be sent back to the makers for any | to be sent back to the makers for any | ||
repairs or adjustments. We could | repairs or adjustments. We could not, of | ||
course, | course, accept any fighting material which | ||
we could not keep in repair ourselves, and | we could not keep in repair ourselves, and | ||
turned the idea down, at the same time | turned the idea down, at the same time | ||
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This was designed by Sir James Henderson | This was designed by Sir James Henderson | ||
and made by Elliott Bros., just in time, but | and made by Elliott Bros., just in time, but | ||
only just, for 1915. Designed and made | only just, for 1915. Designed and made in | ||
a | a hurry, it gave difficulties in use. The idea | ||
was good, but the design was not up to | was good, but the design was not up to | ||
the needs. The only available actual | the needs. The only available actual gyro | ||
wheel was the Anschutz type which was | |||
wheel was the | |||
not really suitable. | not really suitable. | ||
An instance | |||
An instance of the other thing, where | |||
the engineering design of the hardware was | |||
outstandingly good, though it suffered from | outstandingly good, though it suffered from | ||
some limitations in the basic idea, was the | some limitations in the basic idea, was the | ||
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principle was not new, having been used in | principle was not new, having been used in | ||
Nelson's time, when the guns of a battery | Nelson's time, when the guns of a battery | ||
were all set to the same | were all set to the same elevation and fired | ||
together by signal from the one which had | together by signal from the one which had | ||
its sights set for the range. As fitted in | |||
modern ships there was, of course, much | modern ships there was, of course, much | ||
more in it than that, though the principle | more in it than that, though the principle | ||
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the finest example of good design work | the finest example of good design work | ||
over a wide range that I have ever seen, | over a wide range that I have ever seen, | ||
bar none. I do not suppose that any | bar none. I do not suppose that any of it | ||
survives, more's the pity. Even by modem | survives, more's the pity. Even by modem | ||
standards it was quite outstanding, and to | standards it was quite outstanding, and to | ||
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a lot from it, as I did from other designers | a lot from it, as I did from other designers | ||
of the time. | of the time. | ||
Design | |||
==Design== | |||
When after the First World War, the | When after the First World War, the | ||
Admiralty were forming a new section to | Admiralty were forming a new section to | ||
deal specifically with the design of fire | deal specifically with the design of fire | ||
control gear - for the first time - | control gear - for the first time - Isherwood, | ||
Pollen's chief design man, who was | Pollen's chief design man, who was | ||
on Me Committee, brought along Landstad, | on Me Committee, brought along Landstad, | ||
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war fire control ships, when the demand | war fire control ships, when the demand | ||
which later formed the nucleus of an | which later formed the nucleus of an | ||
important branch of the Electrical Engineering | |||
Department (afterwards formed into a | Department (afterwards formed into a | ||
naval Branch) and later still merged into | naval Branch) and later still merged into | ||
the Engineering | the Engineering Branch, is of some interest. | ||
It has been written up by two of its senior | It has been written up by two of its senior | ||
members, but I do not suppose it will ever | members, but I do not suppose it will ever | ||
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with it here. I had too close a personal | with it here. I had too close a personal | ||
connection with it. | connection with it. | ||
I have mentioned a few firms to whom | I have mentioned a few firms to whom | ||
the Admiralty went in | the Admiralty went in search of talent to | ||
design and make its instruments, the Argo | design and make its instruments, the Argo | ||
Company | Company of Pollen, which had the benefit | ||
of Isherwood's design talent and the fine | of Isherwood's design talent and the fine | ||
craftsmanship of Thomas Cooke, of York, | |||
Messrs. Vickers, who approached our fine | Messrs. Vickers, who approached our fine | ||
precision mechanical work from the heavy | precision mechanical work from the heavy | ||
engineering end, and Elliott Bros., who got | engineering end, and Elliott Bros., who got | ||
there from the fine scientific instrument | there from the fine scientific instrument | ||
making end. There were several | making end. There were several others, | ||
perhaps the most notable being | perhaps the most notable being Mssrs. | ||
Barr and Stroud, world | Barr and Stroud, world famous for rangefinders | ||
and associated gear. I | and associated gear. I knew both | ||
Dr. Barr and Dr. Stroud well. They were | Dr. Barr and Dr. Stroud well. They were | ||
both teaching | both teaching engineering, and had combined | ||
to answer an advertisement | to answer an advertisement in The | ||
Times in 1888 announcing a competition for | Times in 1888 announcing a competition for | ||
a rangefinder for army use. The history of | a rangefinder for army use. The history of | ||
Line 456: | Line 394: | ||
makes a fine story, too long to go | makes a fine story, too long to go | ||
into here. | into here. | ||
Another famous firm is Evershed and | Another famous firm is Evershed and | ||
Vignoles, originally only concerned with | |||
electrical instruments. Evershed produced | electrical instruments. Evershed produced | ||
a balanced circuit type of transmission of | a balanced circuit type of transmission of | ||
information which was very | information which was very successfully | ||
used through the Navy until it was superseded | used through the Navy until it was superseded | ||
by elements of the magslip or synchro | by elements of the magslip or synchro | ||
Line 466: | Line 405: | ||
a helm indicator, for showing the | a helm indicator, for showing the | ||
rudder position on the ship's navigating | rudder position on the ship's navigating | ||
bridge, was | bridge, was fitted in 1895 or thereabouts. | ||
The order from my present | The order from my present Chairman, then | ||
sitting in the director tower, and passed by | sitting in the director tower, and passed by | ||
me, in the transmitting station, to the gun | me, in the transmitting station, to the gun | ||
Line 473: | Line 412: | ||
naval memories. Alfred Graham, who | naval memories. Alfred Graham, who | ||
was for something simpler and cheaper specialised in loud speaking naval telephone | was for something simpler and cheaper specialised in loud speaking naval telephone | ||
that would do much the same | that would do much the same thing. equipment was another firm which did | ||
The history | The history of that small section, which much good work for the Navy both before | ||
was formed in the Admiralty in 1920, and and after the 1914 war. | was formed in the Admiralty in 1920, and and after the 1914 war. | ||
Secrecy overdone | ==Secrecy overdone== | ||
When demand for these naval gunnery | When demand for these naval gunnery | ||
instruments was growing, say from 1900 | instruments was growing, say from 1900 | ||
onwards, although there was a very fine | onwards, although there was a very fine | ||
tradition of mathematical and | tradition of mathematical and scientific | ||
instrument work, the kind of material | instrument work, the kind of material | ||
needed for naval or military use had no | needed for naval or military use had no | ||
Line 487: | Line 426: | ||
how such things should be designed and | how such things should be designed and | ||
made. The process was slow, and encumbered | made. The process was slow, and encumbered | ||
by demands of official | by demands of official secrecy. I often | ||
think that this was overdone. More harm | think that this was overdone. More harm | ||
can easily be done by withholding information | can easily be done by withholding information | ||
from people who could have made | from people who could have made | ||
a | a useful contribution than would have ken | ||
done by disclosure to a possible national | done by disclosure to a possible national | ||
rival. I could quote many instances. | rival. I could quote many instances. | ||
In any case the basic knowledge, the | In any case the basic knowledge, the | ||
scientific | scientific theory, cannot be kept secret. | ||
Science is completely international. On the | Science is completely international. On the | ||
other hand, the technology, the practical | other hand, the technology, the practical | ||
know-how, the ability to design and make | know-how, the ability to design and make | ||
the material which will carry out the known | the material which will carry out the known | ||
principles really | principles really well is not international at | ||
all. It depends on personal talents. | all. It depends on personal talents. It is not | ||
by any means a matter of how | by any means a matter of how much money | ||
is invested in it. Over and over again I | is invested in it. Over and over again I | ||
have came across cases - I still come | have came across cases - I still come | ||
Line 510: | Line 449: | ||
the know-how, the practical engineering | the know-how, the practical engineering | ||
design side of the thing at an adequate level | design side of the thing at an adequate level | ||
in the | in the organisations concerned. This is all | ||
part of our national neglect of the art of | part of our national neglect of the art of | ||
engineering at the higher levels of educational, | engineering at the higher levels of educational, | ||
Line 518: | Line 457: | ||
finest possible export activities. The raw | finest possible export activities. The raw | ||
materials of a fine watch movement, which | materials of a fine watch movement, which | ||
sells for pounds, | sells for pounds, probably do not cost as | ||
many pence - | many pence - including the jewels. In the | ||
1860's we dominated world markets in | 1860's we dominated world markets in | ||
watches in much the same way as the Swiss | watches in much the same way as the Swiss | ||
Line 525: | Line 464: | ||
had practically disappeared. The reason is | had practically disappeared. The reason is | ||
simple. There is relatively little in making | simple. There is relatively little in making | ||
watches-- the real problem is in the design | |||
and manufacture of the high precision | |||
automatic machine tools which can turn out | automatic machine tools which can turn out | ||
component parts with sufficient accuracy for | component parts with sufficient accuracy for | ||
Line 532: | Line 471: | ||
These industrial arts, which form the basis | These industrial arts, which form the basis | ||
of industrial prosperity, have always been | of industrial prosperity, have always been | ||
neglected at our higher levels, and, as I | |||
have remarked before, the present tendencies | have remarked before, the present tendencies | ||
in the organisations concerned seem to be | in the organisations concerned seem to be | ||
going in the wrong | going in the wrong direction for recovery. | ||
Management | |||
A | ==Management== | ||
A good instance of this is the exaggerated | |||
emphasis now placed on 'management', as | emphasis now placed on 'management', as | ||
if this were something that could be considered | if this were something that could be considered | ||
separately from | separately from the activity that | ||
is being managed. Good management and | is being managed. Good management and | ||
organisation are naturally very necessary, | organisation are naturally very necessary, | ||
but the | but the activity that is being managed is | ||
04 even greater importance. It demands | 04 even greater importance. It demands | ||
equal - if not higher - human qualities. | equal - if not higher - human qualities. | ||
The situation as regards | The situation as regards this is being | ||
made mwe by the efforts | made mwe by the efforts of our professional | ||
institutions and higher | institutions and higher educational | ||
establishments in their efforts to | establishments in their efforts to create 3 | ||
clear distinction between professional engineers | clear distinction between professional engineers | ||
and technicians. By doing so they | and technicians. By doing so they | ||
are depriving the former of the ability to | are depriving the former of the ability to | ||
carry out their duties properly - to lead | carry out their duties properly - to lead | ||
as well as to manage the | as well as to manage the technician - so | ||
that both, and the country as a whole, can | that both, and the country as a whole, can | ||
enjoy the benefits of a higher state of | enjoy the benefits of a higher state of | ||
development of the art of engineering. | development of the art of engineering. | ||
The | |||
A point I want to | ==The inventor== | ||
meaning of | A point I want to emphasise is the real | ||
meaning of the word 'inventor', and the | |||
relations between the man who thinks of an | relations between the man who thinks of an | ||
idea and the man - or men - who carry | idea and the man - or men - who carry | ||
Line 566: | Line 507: | ||
My experience has invariably been | My experience has invariably been | ||
that the latter is a far more severe, intractable, | that the latter is a far more severe, intractable, | ||
and demanding profMern than the | and demanding profMern (person? {{TONE}}) than the | ||
former, and is not merely a matter of | former, and is not merely a matter of | ||
providing | providing the necessary financial support. | ||
The creative idea may be a real 'brain | The creative idea may be a real 'brain | ||
wave', but it can be done by one man in | wave', but it can be done by one man in | ||
Line 581: | Line 522: | ||
drawings, the detailing and process instructions | drawings, the detailing and process instructions | ||
required to raise the 'state of the art' | required to raise the 'state of the art' | ||
to the stage at which it can cope with his | |||
to the stage at | |||
Ideas and demands? If not - who does! | Ideas and demands? If not - who does! | ||
The case of the inventor who has an idea | The case of the inventor who has an idea | ||
but is not capable of | but is not capable of expressing it in really | ||
effective form is hard. But unless he can | |||
express it in effective form, either by making | express it in effective form, either by making | ||
it himself, or by doing the design work | |||
himself in effective form, so that the thing | |||
could be made, with confidence, In accordance | could be made, with confidence, In accordance | ||
with his drawings and instructions, it | |||
IS extremely difficult for him to convince | IS extremely difficult for him to convince | ||
knowledgeable people that the idea is a | knowledgeable people that the idea is a | ||
good one. If he has to rely on someone else | good one. If he has to rely on someone else | ||
to 'lick his ideas into | to 'lick his ideas into practical working | ||
form' he must not expect that | form' he must not expect that this essential | ||
work can be relegated to a lower level. He | work can be relegated to a lower level. He | ||
must be able to supervise this work himself, | must be able to supervise this work himself, | ||
Line 602: | Line 542: | ||
not being able to make up for What are | not being able to make up for What are | ||
really his own deficiencies. | really his own deficiencies. | ||
In the course of a long | |||
In the course of a long working lifetime | |||
m - and very closely associated with - | m - and very closely associated with - | ||
the engineering industry and the Navy, | the engineering industry and the Navy, I | ||
have met, admired, cursed, collaborated | have met, admired, cursed, collaborated | ||
with, and suffered from, many kinds of | |||
Inventors. In every case that 1 can think | Inventors. In every case that 1 can think | ||
of the design of the actual hardware has | of the design of the actual hardware has | ||
been a more difficult and demanding problem | been a more difficult and demanding problem | ||
than the invention, as | than the invention, as such, or the idea | ||
behind it, even in the case of the relatively | |||
small scale material that I have been associated with. In the case of major operations | |||
such as steel manufacture, or gas turbines, | |||
such as steel manufacture, or gas | |||
this is much more so. Inventors who complain | this is much more so. Inventors who complain | ||
of the difficulty of putting their | of the difficulty of putting their | ||
Line 625: | Line 565: | ||
helping others to understand it, but that is | helping others to understand it, but that is | ||
all. The only thing that really counts is | all. The only thing that really counts is | ||
the | the complete set of detail working drawings | ||
and process instructions, to which the thing | and process instructions, to which the thing | ||
can be made with confidence in the result. | can be made with confidence in the result. | ||
The design is the critical matter, and the | The design is the critical matter, and the | ||
draughtsman or designer who does this work | draughtsman or designer who does this work | ||
must not be | must not be considered as the equivalent | ||
of the typist who puts into tidy form the | of the typist who puts into tidy form the | ||
manuscript scrawl of the author. He is more | manuscript scrawl of the author. He is more | ||
like Shakespeare's poet : 'and as imagination | |||
bodies forth the form of things unknown | bodies forth the form of things unknown | ||
the poet's pen turns them to shapes. | the poet's pen turns them to shapes. | ||
and gives to airy nothing a local habitation | and gives to airy nothing a local habitation | ||
and a name'. | and a name'. | ||
Apart from | ==Progress== | ||
in the turn over | Apart from the great earlier changes involved | ||
in the turn over from sail to steam | |||
propulsion - which is far too wide a subject | propulsion - which is far too wide a subject | ||
for me to touch on - the period from 1904 | for me to touch on - the period from 1904 | ||
to 1914 was probably the time of the most | to 1914 was probably the time of the most | ||
rapid development of naval material either | |||
before or since. It included that well known | before or since. It included that well known | ||
election party cry: 'We want eight, and we | election party cry: 'We want eight, and we | ||
won't wait'. This was | won't wait'. This was eight capital, superdreadnought | ||
ships, to be laid | ships, to be laid down in the | ||
one year's | one year's building programme! This | ||
astonishing thing was done, and those ships | astonishing thing was done, and those ships | ||
were some of those which fought at | were some of those which fought at | ||
Jutland in 1916. Since the last war, however, | Jutland in 1916. Since the last war, however, | ||
I | I suppose that progress may have been | ||
even more rapid - though | even more rapid - though the quantity of | ||
material made has been very much less - | material made has been very much less - | ||
but I could not deal with these matters. | but I could not deal with these matters. | ||
even if I knew what was going on. | even if I knew what was going on. | ||
Progress is probably more | Progress is probably more rapid than it | ||
was during my active time. In earlier days, | was during my active time. In earlier days, | ||
though the difficulties of carrying an invention | though the difficulties of carrying an invention | ||
into effect were | into effect were probably greater than | ||
now, the process was simpler. The inventor | now, the process was simpler. The inventor | ||
usually played the major part in | usually played the major part in carrying | ||
out the whole project, as was | out the whole project, as was the case with | ||
James Watt with the condensing steam | James Watt with the condensing steam | ||
engine. He not only did the design work | engine. He not only did the design work | ||
Line 671: | Line 612: | ||
supervision. He had to. There was no one | supervision. He had to. There was no one | ||
else who could have done it. Today few | else who could have done it. Today few | ||
inventors can carry a major project | inventors can carry a major project through | ||
themselves. They are usually dependent on | themselves. They are usually dependent on | ||
a very well developed 'state of the art', | a very well developed 'state of the art', | ||
though there are not lacking men for whom | though there are not lacking men for whom | ||
the current state of the art is not adequate | the current state of the art is not adequate | ||
to fulfil their ideas. They have to | to fulfil their ideas. They have to raise the | ||
whole standard of technique | whole standard of technique somehow, to | ||
enable their ideas to materialise. These | enable their ideas to materialise. These men | ||
are the real leaders. This usually - though | are the real leaders. This usually - though | ||
not always - means getting financial and | not always - means getting financial and | ||
Line 684: | Line 625: | ||
concerned. Instances are the Parsons Steam | concerned. Instances are the Parsons Steam | ||
Turbine and the Whittle Jet Engine. | Turbine and the Whittle Jet Engine. | ||
I do | I do not think anyone could have been | ||
said to have ' | said to have 'invented' either the torpedo or | ||
the gyro | the gyro compass, very important instances | ||
of naval material. The number of separate | |||
of naval material. The | |||
inventions concerned with these two Instances | inventions concerned with these two Instances | ||
1s just colossal. A few names, however, | 1s just colossal. A few names, however, | ||
the | the Austrian Obry and Robert | ||
Whitehead for the torpedo in the 1870's, | |||
and Sperry and Anschutz for the gyro | and Sperry and Anschutz for the gyro | ||
compass | compass in more recent times, do stand out | ||
as | as having made the most important contributions | ||
to the state of | to the state of the art, which is | ||
still developing. Another great name, Dr. | |||
Draper, of MIT inspired and led the work | Draper, of MIT inspired and led the work | ||
on constrained gyros | on constrained gyros which led to the | ||
present incredible accuracy of submarine | present incredible accuracy of submarine | ||
and space ' | and space 'inertial navigation'. This is still | ||
developing. It was referred to | developing. It was referred to in The Times | ||
today. | today. | ||
==Nuts and bolts!== | |||
The mixed attitude of the Navy towards | The mixed attitude of the Navy towards | ||
its | its fighting material can best be indicated, | ||
I think, by the deprecatory | I think, by the deprecatory remark I have | ||
often heard about some officer who is | often heard about some officer who is really | ||
interested in improvement in it: 'Oh, yes, | |||
so and so is a very good nuts and bolts | so and so is a very good nuts and bolts | ||
man'. | man'. Admittedly this interest in material | ||
matters may not be regarded as the naval | |||
officer's most important characteristic. It | officer's most important characteristic. It | ||
often stands in the way of his naval career. | |||
In many cases such a man is sacrificing | In many cases such a man is sacrificing | ||
himself to make up for the deficiencies of | himself to make up for the deficiencies of | ||
the whole | the whole organisation, as someone, somewhere, | ||
at a pretty high level | at a pretty high level in the hierarchy, | ||
with a very high level of user knowledge | with a very high level of user knowledge | ||
and | and professional technical competence must | ||
attend to these matters if useful progress | attend to these matters if useful progress | ||
is to be made. My long series of | is to be made. My long series of post war | ||
articles on these matters In the Naval Review | articles on these matters In the Naval Review | ||
laid great stress on the damage done | laid great stress on the damage done | ||
by this imbalance between the user and the | by this imbalance between the user and the | ||
designer of | designer of naval fighting material. Would | ||
Admiral Vernon's contemporaries have | Admiral Vernon's contemporaries have | ||
referred to him as a good nuts and bolts | referred to him as a good nuts and bolts | ||
(or masts and sails) man? | (or masts and sails) man? | ||
This neglect of real competent | |||
This neglect of real competent attention | |||
to the quality of its material Which I have | to the quality of its material Which I have | ||
described as naval weakness may be possibly | described as naval weakness may be possibly | ||
only one aspect of a characteristic social | only one aspect of a characteristic social | ||
weakness in the whole | weakness in the whole country: a great | ||
respect for the 'scientist' or the 'inventor' | respect for the 'scientist' or the 'inventor' | ||
combined with a most remarkable | combined with a most remarkable level of | ||
respect for the 'nuts and bolts man' who | respect for the 'nuts and bolts man' who | ||
turns the invention into a practical | turns the invention into a practical working | ||
form. The present shortage of men who can | form. The present shortage of men who can | ||
do this | do this kind of work well is not at all | ||
surprising. It is a direct result of the lack | |||
of | of appreciation by the country as a whole | ||
of this kind of activity. This leads to doubts | of this kind of activity. This leads to doubts | ||
as to our economic prospects. The Feilden | as to our economic prospects. The Feilden | ||
Report of 1963 deserves careful study. | Report of 1963 deserves careful study. | ||
The lessons that I see for h e future are, | The lessons that I see for h e future are, | ||
that over- | that over-emphasis on 'research' has diverted | ||
attention from the means for carrying the | |||
research to the | research to the stage of useful reliable hardware. | ||
The results of | The results of this have been serious. | ||
To recover we need to reverse some | To recover we need to reverse some | ||
current trends, | current trends, such as the attempt by | ||
universities and professional institutions to | universities and professional institutions to | ||
make a clear cut | make a clear cut distinction between professional engineers and technicians. The | ||
greater must include the less, and unless a | greater must include the less, and unless a | ||
man is or has been a very good technician | man is or has been a very good technician | ||
he 1s very unlikely to be a good engineer. | he 1s very unlikely to be a good engineer. | ||
Science can do | Science can do nothing unless supported by | ||
engineering at an adequate level. | |||
The importance of 'management' as a | The importance of 'management' as a | ||
thing in its own | thing in its own right, apart from professional | ||
competence in the | competence in the activity being | ||
managed, has | managed, has been exaggerated; and | ||
important decisions are taken by men | important decisions are taken by men at an | ||
administrative level who are not capable d | administrative level who are not capable d | ||
exercising a right judgement as to | exercising a right judgement as to the | ||
effect of | effect of their deoiions. | ||
The simple fact is that adequate | |||
The simple fact is that adequate attention | |||
must be paid to all aspects of the product, | must be paid to all aspects of the product, | ||
including | including selling it, at all levels of the | ||
organisation concerned. If | organisation concerned. If this 1s done the | ||
profit, whether | profit, whether operational or financial, 1s | ||
almost automatic, as a kind of by-product. | almost automatic, as a kind of by-product. | ||
On this warning note I will pipe down, | On this warning note I will pipe down, | ||
Line 779: | Line 721: | ||
I have only been dealing with - in | I have only been dealing with - in | ||
Wordsworth's words : 'Old, unhappy, far | Wordsworth's words : 'Old, unhappy, far | ||
off things and battles long ago' | off things and battles long ago' it must be | ||
remembered that human nature only changes | remembered that human nature only changes | ||
slowly - if at all - and that, measured | slowly - if at all - and that, measured | ||
in these terms the twenty-five year? back | in these terms the twenty-five year? back | ||
to the last war, and the fifty-five years back | to the last war, and the fifty-five years back | ||
to the other one, are really | to the other one, are really quite brief | ||
periods. |
Revision as of 02:01, 13 March 2011
Invention and the Navy was a paper read at a Meeting of the Institute of Patentees and Inventors by Hugh Clausen, O.B.E., I.S.O., B.Sc.(Eng.), formerly Senior Principal Scientific Officer at the Admiralty, at the Royal Society of Arts on Friday, 30 January, 1970 reprinted with acknowledgements. In the chair was Rear-Admiral Frank Elliott, O.B.E., who was Gunnery Officer of H.M.S. Benbow throughout the Kaiser's war. Mr. Clausen served as a Lieutenant R.N.V.R. in that ship from 1915 to 1919: he and Lieut.-Commander Elliott earned their O.B.E.s for improvements in gunnery fire control gear. The talk is reproduced in The Naval Review, 1970-4, pp. 330-337.
Speech
THE matters I have to deal with, Invention and the Navy, cover such a vast field that they could not possibly be dealt with effectively in a single paper. I propose to survey very briefly a number of inventions intimately associated with the Navy, especially some of those which have come within my personal knowledge; to make some comment upon Naval attitudes to invention; and last but not least, to examine the nature of invention and its relationship to design.
The Navy has always shown a strangely mixed attitude towards new inventions. In olden days there was, of course, less scope, and H.M.S. Victory, for example, refitting after Trafalgar, could have found pretty nearly all the facilities needed - except perhaps the size of the dry dock - in any of H.M. Dockyards of a hundred years earlier, just as ship's companies of those earlier days could have sailed and fought ships of a century later in time , with very litt!e practice.
Slow, sure development
Visiting HMS Victory in Portsmouth Yard I have always come away with a better impression of good design and fitness for purpose than I have derived from any of my countless visits to modern ships of war. Progress was slow, and the ships and their equipment were the result of many years of development to the stage when they were, within the state of the art of the time, finished and perfect, and there was little or nothing that could be usefully added or taken away.
An early naval innovator, Admiral Vernon (1684-1757), after whom the Navy's Torpedo and Electrical Experimental Establishment was named, was famous for initiating new sailing rigs and tactics, but is best known for his institution of the rum ration, or grog, now apparently being done away with. I suppose all new inventions become obsolete sooner or later! Even the good ones.
In Nelson's time there were, of course, excellent (for the time) instruments, telescopes, sextants and other navigational instruments available, but things were, as a whole, left to the individual inventor.
Harrison
A good example is the well known story of the ship's chronometer. The Admiralty, seeking a means for finding a ship's position at sea, had for long offered an award of 20,000 pounds, a vast sum in those days, part of which, after long shifts and struggles to get out of it, was awarded to Harrison, not an instrument maker but a carpenter by trade, whose marvelous chronometers are still keeping good time in the National Maritime Museum at Greenwich. He designed and made them himself, and the Government, thinking perhaps that there was some magic about it, withheld the award until a successful copy had been made by someone else. This was done by Larcombe Kendall, a well known watchmaker of the time.
This, like the contemporary work of James Watt with his steam engine, was a personal effort as were the later developments of the chronometer, and many other things. The idea of combining such facilities as were available in a concerted effort, with adequate support, is a thing of very recent growth, since my own time in the engineering world, in fact. Every advance was formerly the result of individual effort rather than organised collaboration. This is still largely the case, as can be seen by more recent examples which I will deal with later. Even now, large research establishments often depend for their success on the luck of having one or two men of real genius, not by any means the head man, to inspire and guide the rat, and show how to express an inventor's ideas in practical ironmongery.
The use of steam - and later of internal combustion engines - for propelling ships can hardly be called an invention, though innumerable inventions were involved in the development of the marine engine to its wonderful state of perfection in the 1900s, More it was overtaken by the steam turbine. This latter, foreshadowed by Hero of Alexandria about zero A.D., was the result of many inventions by many different men, each making his contribution, and the balance of importance between the 'invention' and the means for carrying the idea into successful effect has never been simple. It is perhaps of increasing complexity now, with the increasing degree of specialization, and separation of the different functions and activities concerned. The Patent Office, I believe, will accept for a patent either a new principle, or a new method of carrying an established principle into effect, provided that the means for carrying it into effect are fully declared in both cases.
The locomotive torpedo
The torpedo is a naval example of the complexity of the development of an invention. Originally just an explosive charge placed - somehow - close to a ship, it has passed through many stages of invention and design before reaching the (relative) perfection of the 21 inch heater torpedo of 1914, both British and German and the startling success of the Japanese torpedo in the second world war. The propulsion system where, in the older cold torpedo the cylinders were water jacketed to prevent them from freezing up whilst in the heater torpedo the water jackets were to prevent them from burning out, the automatic steering with gyro control, t!he depth regulating gear, and methods of construction and manufacture have d l Involved a wide range of inventions. In much of this the situation was confused by the demands of secrecy. Robert Whitehead, working in Milan and under Austrian patronage at Fiume led to two, both originally almost identical, British and German torpedoes, the latter being christened the 'Schwarzkopf' to distinguish it from the Whitehead. The efforts of Whitehead and Obry, a famous Austrian engineer, to keep the controlling gear secret whilst at the same time trying to sell the idea to navies which insisted on both internal full knowledge combined with external secrecy became a bit awkward at times.
Gyro compass
The gyro compass provided a vast field for patents and inventions, for rivalries and law suits between various claimants. The directional gyro had been used in torpedos to control a short run, but to give a true North continuously for navigation was another story, and demanded much more effort. The gunnery master gyro, to give a real precision azimuth control was even more severe. The ultimate prize, if it could be won, seemed dazzling, and the struggles and rivalries, in which a sort of mathematical mysticism was apparent, were reminiscent of those around the philosopher's stone of The Middle Ages.
The first one used in the British Navy was the German Anschutz, originally of German manufacture hut later made by Elliott Bros. under licence. Though these were carried to a very high degree of perfection in later marks in Germany, we were not satisfied with them, and they were all replaced by American Sperry compasses, first of American manufacture and later made here under licence. I was shipmates with both types in the first world war, and for some time was responsible for their maintenance.
The Brown gyro compass was tried by the Navy but never widely adopted. Brawn also produced a 'slow wanderer' compass, for real precision work, with an occasional check from a north seeker. Great hopes were placed on these for gunnery controls at the time, but I do not think that they got very far, though the principles had useful applications elsewhere. S. G. Brown was a remarkable man whom I knew fairly well ; quite a genius in fact, in invention and design. He had been a laboratory assistant to Professor Perry, who was then, with Lord Kelvin, our national gyro expert. He not only invented his M type of sensitive element and follow up system, he designed it in all its detail, and built it himself, with his own hands. There was some lovely design work in it, and in the stepper motors and transmitters for the remote receivers, which I have always admired. It had a wide use in the merchant navy. Though he had no formal academic qualifications he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society. Here is a very particular case of the balance between the inventor and the designer. It should be clearly understood by all budding inventors that even when they have got their final specification filed this is only the beginning. The detail design and manufacture, on which success will ultimately depend, may both need equal or higher mental and intellectual qualities than the 'invention'.
I can illustrate this by another inventor in the gyro compass field, and as those concerned are now dead I can give names. Sir James Henderson who, when I joined the Admiralty, was Adviser on gyroscopic equipment, was a brilliant physicist. His analytical and mathematical work was often really brilliant, but he had no sense of mechanical design at all. He also had the bad luck of being unable to recruit first class people to help him with the design work. There were perhaps reasons for this: he seemed to me to work on the principle of 'heads I win, tails you lose'. Any failure of his material was always attributed to poor design. This may have been true, but he ought to have known this before manufacture in numbers was put in hand. The inventor who expects other people to carry out his ideas for him in the way of detail design will always be in trouble. He need not, as Harrison and S. G. Brown did, make the whole trial gear himself personally but, if he is a real 'inventor', he must be able to advance the state of the art - if need be - so as to enable it to carry out his ideas.
Invention is not the end If he has not the technical ability to do this there are courses open to him. He can get down to it, learn from others, and try himself, as I have known men do. The highest value he may derive from this is a due sense of humility. Another way is to try to find some other man with the necessary abilities who is equally keen on the idea, and collaborate with him on a partnership basis. The idea may be brilliant, but the quality of the product depends on the detail design, and on the ability to embody in this, to an optimum extent, the results of experiment and trial, and service use. The place where quality is injected into the product is on the drawing board, and the instrument used for injecting it is a pencil. Who is it who holds - or guides in detail - this pencil? There is a grave lack of a tradition of really good precision engineering design (on which everything else depends) in our higher educational, industrial, and managerial circles.
I was never actively concerned in the design of the gyro compass, but I was very dependent on it to provide the stable azimuth as a basis for the gunnery fire control system, with which I was very intimately concerned. The gun-fire control system was perhaps an even more complex battle ground of rival personalities, systems, inventions and patents than the gyro compass. The combination of the two widens the field still further.
Like any other aspect of naval activity, its weapons give wide scope for invention. Naval guns were, I believe, used at the Battle of Sluys, in Edward III's time. They must have been pretty crude, but development has gone on, at varying speed, but without much real change until Victorian engineering development made great strides possible. The leaders here were those great engineers Joseph Whitworth and William Armstrong, who subsequently combined. This led to the very great extension of the ranges at which guns could be effectively used, and to means for increasing this effectiveness. The fixed mounting guns of land artillery could be used effectively at very long ranges, but firing from a moving ship at a moving target was quite another story.
Fire control
It was in 1900 that Arthur H. Pollen, a very energetic and versatile man of many activities and interests, was a visitor as a guest of the Captain on one of HM ships in the Mediterranean. He was interested to see that 'battle practice' was being carried out at about a quarter of the effective range of the guns, at a stationary target. He was convinced that this range could be vastly increased by the use of an accurate control system, and he badgered the authorities unmercifully to do something about it. He formed a company - the Argo Company - to develop his ideas, some of which were given trials in HM ships at various times between 1902 and 1914.
He had recruited a very powerful design team, including Isherwood and Landstad, both of whom I knew later. They produced a complete fire control system part of which was fitted in one of the Battle Squadrons of the Grand Fleet. It was far superior in execution - though with some disadvantages in use - to the somewhat later Dreyer fire control system fitted in the other Grand Fleet ships. This was produced by the London firm of Elliott Bros., where Mr. (later Sir Keith) Elphinstone collaborated with Commander (later Admiral) Dreyer In the development.
The difficulties and squabbles between the protagonists of these two systems, is a sorry story which I cannot go into in detail, though it constitutes an important chapter in the history of Invention and the Navy. Lack of collaboration put back the development of precision naval gunnery for many years. It would have been much better to have given full scope for the development of both, in fair competition, if that were possible.
I suppose one of the reasons for slow progress, and many of the now apparently unnecessary difficulties, was that there was, at the time, no real competent authority - in the professional sense - to deal with technical development. 'This led to such roundabout ways - or perhaps short cuts - as Mr. Pollen writing desperate letters to Winston Churchill, then First Lord of the Admiralty, pleading for better facilities for trials of his fire control system. The lack of channels for the development of new ideas, and the resulting frustrations and difficulties of personal effort appears again and again. An earlier example was the 'battle of the guns' fought between Armstrong and Whitworth, largely carried on in letters published in The Times in the 1860s and 70s.
A similar lack of what one might call professional competence in positions of authority appears in the story of the ill-fated HMS Captain, a steam driven turret ship of unusual design with an extremely low freeboard, to which the Admiralty authorities also insisted on having a complete rig of heavy masts and sails. She was lost in a storm, with few, if any survivors: a fate which a little hindsight showed to have been inevitable.
Secrecy
One instance of the kind of difficulties which crop up in the development of naval material is the case of what became known as the Henderson firing gear. A very able Austrian engineer, Olbry, whom we have met before, had developed an artificial horizon, to give the instant of firing when the horizon was obscured. This was seen, in Austria, by an Admiralty representative (Commander Dreyer, I believe) and recommended for adoption. Obry, however, insisted that as the mechanism was secret it could only be supplied in a sealed case, to be sent back to the makers for any repairs or adjustments. We could not, of course, accept any fighting material which we could not keep in repair ourselves, and turned the idea down, at the same time trying to produce a home made substitute. This was designed by Sir James Henderson and made by Elliott Bros., just in time, but only just, for 1915. Designed and made in a hurry, it gave difficulties in use. The idea was good, but the design was not up to the needs. The only available actual gyro wheel was the Anschutz type which was not really suitable.
An instance of the other thing, where the engineering design of the hardware was outstandingly good, though it suffered from some limitations in the basic idea, was the director firing gear as fitted in the Grand Fleet just before and during the 1914 war. The naval man behind this was Admiral Sir Percy Scott who, perhaps more than anyone else, was the prime stimulant to naval gunnery efficiency. The underlying principle was not new, having been used in Nelson's time, when the guns of a battery were all set to the same elevation and fired together by signal from the one which had its sights set for the range. As fitted in modern ships there was, of course, much more in it than that, though the principle was the same. This gear, designed by a genius of a man at Vickers, Arthur Perham, whom I met later at the Admiralty, was the finest example of good design work over a wide range that I have ever seen, bar none. I do not suppose that any of it survives, more's the pity. Even by modem standards it was quite outstanding, and to create it from nothing, so to speak, which was the case as there was nothing to develop it from, was remarkable. I learned a lot from it, as I did from other designers of the time.
Design
When after the First World War, the Admiralty were forming a new section to deal specifically with the design of fire control gear - for the first time - Isherwood, Pollen's chief design man, who was on Me Committee, brought along Landstad, his own man, so I did not get on to that work until later. It was just as well for all concerned. I hadn't enough experience then, but, working next door, on allied fire control communication material, I learned enough to take over from them after the completion of the first generation of post war fire control ships, when the demand which later formed the nucleus of an important branch of the Electrical Engineering Department (afterwards formed into a naval Branch) and later still merged into the Engineering Branch, is of some interest. It has been written up by two of its senior members, but I do not suppose it will ever be published. It is not my place to deal with it here. I had too close a personal connection with it.
I have mentioned a few firms to whom the Admiralty went in search of talent to design and make its instruments, the Argo Company of Pollen, which had the benefit of Isherwood's design talent and the fine craftsmanship of Thomas Cooke, of York, Messrs. Vickers, who approached our fine precision mechanical work from the heavy engineering end, and Elliott Bros., who got there from the fine scientific instrument making end. There were several others, perhaps the most notable being Mssrs. Barr and Stroud, world famous for rangefinders and associated gear. I knew both Dr. Barr and Dr. Stroud well. They were both teaching engineering, and had combined to answer an advertisement in The Times in 1888 announcing a competition for a rangefinder for army use. The history of the firm's development from these small beginnings to their 30 foot optical rangefinders makes a fine story, too long to go into here.
Another famous firm is Evershed and Vignoles, originally only concerned with electrical instruments. Evershed produced a balanced circuit type of transmission of information which was very successfully used through the Navy until it was superseded by elements of the magslip or synchro type after the last War. Their first instrument, a helm indicator, for showing the rudder position on the ship's navigating bridge, was fitted in 1895 or thereabouts. The order from my present Chairman, then sitting in the director tower, and passed by me, in the transmitting station, to the gun turrets: 'Follow Evershed' revives many naval memories. Alfred Graham, who was for something simpler and cheaper specialised in loud speaking naval telephone that would do much the same thing. equipment was another firm which did The history of that small section, which much good work for the Navy both before was formed in the Admiralty in 1920, and and after the 1914 war.
Secrecy overdone
When demand for these naval gunnery instruments was growing, say from 1900 onwards, although there was a very fine tradition of mathematical and scientific instrument work, the kind of material needed for naval or military use had no real broadly based tradition behind it of how such things should be designed and made. The process was slow, and encumbered by demands of official secrecy. I often think that this was overdone. More harm can easily be done by withholding information from people who could have made a useful contribution than would have ken done by disclosure to a possible national rival. I could quote many instances. In any case the basic knowledge, the scientific theory, cannot be kept secret. Science is completely international. On the other hand, the technology, the practical know-how, the ability to design and make the material which will carry out the known principles really well is not international at all. It depends on personal talents. It is not by any means a matter of how much money is invested in it. Over and over again I have came across cases - I still come across them - where we know everything about the theory, and have plenty of money to put into it, but have never developed the know-how, the practical engineering design side of the thing at an adequate level in the organisations concerned. This is all part of our national neglect of the art of engineering at the higher levels of educational, industrial and managerial activities. The classic case is, I suppose, the watchmaking industry. Incidentally one of the finest possible export activities. The raw materials of a fine watch movement, which sells for pounds, probably do not cost as many pence - including the jewels. In the 1860's we dominated world markets in watches in much the same way as the Swiss do now, but by about 1912 the industry had practically disappeared. The reason is simple. There is relatively little in making watches-- the real problem is in the design and manufacture of the high precision automatic machine tools which can turn out component parts with sufficient accuracy for random assembly to give good timekeeping. These industrial arts, which form the basis of industrial prosperity, have always been neglected at our higher levels, and, as I have remarked before, the present tendencies in the organisations concerned seem to be going in the wrong direction for recovery.
Management
A good instance of this is the exaggerated emphasis now placed on 'management', as if this were something that could be considered separately from the activity that is being managed. Good management and organisation are naturally very necessary, but the activity that is being managed is 04 even greater importance. It demands equal - if not higher - human qualities. The situation as regards this is being made mwe by the efforts of our professional institutions and higher educational establishments in their efforts to create 3 clear distinction between professional engineers and technicians. By doing so they are depriving the former of the ability to carry out their duties properly - to lead as well as to manage the technician - so that both, and the country as a whole, can enjoy the benefits of a higher state of development of the art of engineering.
The inventor
A point I want to emphasise is the real meaning of the word 'inventor', and the relations between the man who thinks of an idea and the man - or men - who carry it through to a practical stage of development. My experience has invariably been that the latter is a far more severe, intractable, and demanding profMern (person? — TONY LOVELL, Editor.) than the former, and is not merely a matter of providing the necessary financial support. The creative idea may be a real 'brain wave', but it can be done by one man in his spare time, or sitting in a deck chair in the garden on Sunday afternoon. The progress to reality, the development from bare ideas to useful ironmongery, may involve hundreds, if not thousands, of. people, working to a concerted end, supervised and co-ordinated by - whom? Does the inventor guMe and control the lay-out drawings, the detailing and process instructions required to raise the 'state of the art' to the stage at which it can cope with his Ideas and demands? If not - who does! The case of the inventor who has an idea but is not capable of expressing it in really effective form is hard. But unless he can express it in effective form, either by making it himself, or by doing the design work himself in effective form, so that the thing could be made, with confidence, In accordance with his drawings and instructions, it IS extremely difficult for him to convince knowledgeable people that the idea is a good one. If he has to rely on someone else to 'lick his ideas into practical working form' he must not expect that this essential work can be relegated to a lower level. He must be able to supervise this work himself, and should not blame his draughtsman for not being able to make up for What are really his own deficiencies.
In the course of a long working lifetime m - and very closely associated with - the engineering industry and the Navy, I have met, admired, cursed, collaborated with, and suffered from, many kinds of Inventors. In every case that 1 can think of the design of the actual hardware has been a more difficult and demanding problem than the invention, as such, or the idea behind it, even in the case of the relatively small scale material that I have been associated with. In the case of major operations such as steel manufacture, or gas turbines, this is much more so. Inventors who complain of the difficulty of putting their ideas over should remember this. They should also remember that words are an utterly inadequate medium for the transfer of thought in developing from ideas to ironmongery. Models may be of value in helping to explain how an idea works, and helping others to understand it, but that is all. The only thing that really counts is the complete set of detail working drawings and process instructions, to which the thing can be made with confidence in the result. The design is the critical matter, and the draughtsman or designer who does this work must not be considered as the equivalent of the typist who puts into tidy form the manuscript scrawl of the author. He is more like Shakespeare's poet : 'and as imagination bodies forth the form of things unknown the poet's pen turns them to shapes. and gives to airy nothing a local habitation and a name'.
Progress
Apart from the great earlier changes involved in the turn over from sail to steam propulsion - which is far too wide a subject for me to touch on - the period from 1904 to 1914 was probably the time of the most rapid development of naval material either before or since. It included that well known election party cry: 'We want eight, and we won't wait'. This was eight capital, superdreadnought ships, to be laid down in the one year's building programme! This astonishing thing was done, and those ships were some of those which fought at Jutland in 1916. Since the last war, however, I suppose that progress may have been even more rapid - though the quantity of material made has been very much less - but I could not deal with these matters. even if I knew what was going on. Progress is probably more rapid than it was during my active time. In earlier days, though the difficulties of carrying an invention into effect were probably greater than now, the process was simpler. The inventor usually played the major part in carrying out the whole project, as was the case with James Watt with the condensing steam engine. He not only did the design work and made his models himself ; he controlled the manufacture under his own personal supervision. He had to. There was no one else who could have done it. Today few inventors can carry a major project through themselves. They are usually dependent on a very well developed 'state of the art', though there are not lacking men for whom the current state of the art is not adequate to fulfil their ideas. They have to raise the whole standard of technique somehow, to enable their ideas to materialise. These men are the real leaders. This usually - though not always - means getting financial and moral support from the many activities concerned. Instances are the Parsons Steam Turbine and the Whittle Jet Engine. I do not think anyone could have been said to have 'invented' either the torpedo or the gyro compass, very important instances of naval material. The number of separate inventions concerned with these two Instances 1s just colossal. A few names, however, the Austrian Obry and Robert Whitehead for the torpedo in the 1870's, and Sperry and Anschutz for the gyro compass in more recent times, do stand out as having made the most important contributions to the state of the art, which is still developing. Another great name, Dr. Draper, of MIT inspired and led the work on constrained gyros which led to the present incredible accuracy of submarine and space 'inertial navigation'. This is still developing. It was referred to in The Times today.
Nuts and bolts!
The mixed attitude of the Navy towards its fighting material can best be indicated, I think, by the deprecatory remark I have often heard about some officer who is really interested in improvement in it: 'Oh, yes, so and so is a very good nuts and bolts man'. Admittedly this interest in material matters may not be regarded as the naval officer's most important characteristic. It often stands in the way of his naval career. In many cases such a man is sacrificing himself to make up for the deficiencies of the whole organisation, as someone, somewhere, at a pretty high level in the hierarchy, with a very high level of user knowledge and professional technical competence must attend to these matters if useful progress is to be made. My long series of post war articles on these matters In the Naval Review laid great stress on the damage done by this imbalance between the user and the designer of naval fighting material. Would Admiral Vernon's contemporaries have referred to him as a good nuts and bolts (or masts and sails) man?
This neglect of real competent attention to the quality of its material Which I have described as naval weakness may be possibly only one aspect of a characteristic social weakness in the whole country: a great respect for the 'scientist' or the 'inventor' combined with a most remarkable level of respect for the 'nuts and bolts man' who turns the invention into a practical working form. The present shortage of men who can do this kind of work well is not at all surprising. It is a direct result of the lack of appreciation by the country as a whole of this kind of activity. This leads to doubts as to our economic prospects. The Feilden Report of 1963 deserves careful study. The lessons that I see for h e future are, that over-emphasis on 'research' has diverted attention from the means for carrying the research to the stage of useful reliable hardware. The results of this have been serious. To recover we need to reverse some current trends, such as the attempt by universities and professional institutions to make a clear cut distinction between professional engineers and technicians. The greater must include the less, and unless a man is or has been a very good technician he 1s very unlikely to be a good engineer. Science can do nothing unless supported by engineering at an adequate level. The importance of 'management' as a thing in its own right, apart from professional competence in the activity being managed, has been exaggerated; and important decisions are taken by men at an administrative level who are not capable d exercising a right judgement as to the effect of their deoiions.
The simple fact is that adequate attention must be paid to all aspects of the product, including selling it, at all levels of the organisation concerned. If this 1s done the profit, whether operational or financial, 1s almost automatic, as a kind of by-product. On this warning note I will pipe down, leaving time for discussion. If it seems that I have only been dealing with - in Wordsworth's words : 'Old, unhappy, far off things and battles long ago' it must be remembered that human nature only changes slowly - if at all - and that, measured in these terms the twenty-five year? back to the last war, and the fifty-five years back to the other one, are really quite brief periods.