Gyrocompass
Encyclopedia : G : GY : GYR : Gyrocompass
The following description refers to the gyrocompasses used on ships. Aircraft also use gyrocompasses, but use different, faster means to counter the precession of the compass. One of those means is to use a magnetic compass to continually adjust the gyrocompass. Also, some gyrocompasses are driven by compressed air instead of electricity. An astrocompass can also be used to ascertain true North.
A gyrocompass is a compass which finds North by using an (electrically powered) fast spinning wheel and friction forces in order to exploit the rotation of the Earth. Gyrocompasses are widely used on ships. They have two main advantages over magnetic compasses:
- they find true North, i.e. the direction of Earth's rotational axis, as opposed to magnetic north,
- they are not affected by metal in a ship's hull.
This is because true North is the only direction for which the gyroscope can remain on the surface of the earth and not be required to change. This is considered to be a point of minimum potential energy.
Since the operation of a gyrocompass crucially depends on its rotation on Earth, it won't function correctly if the vessel it is mounted on is fast moving, especially in East-West direction.
The gyrocompass was patented in 1885 by the Dutch Martinus Gerardus van den Bos; however, his device never worked properly. In 1889, Captain Arthur Krebs designed an electric pendular gyroscope for the experimental French submarine Gymnote. It allowed the Gymnote to force a naval blocus in 1890. In 1903, the German Herman Anschütz-Kaempfe constructed a working gyrocompass and obtained a patent on the design. In 1908, Anschütz-Kaempfe and the American inventor Elmer Ambrose Sperry patented the gyrocompass in Britain and the US. When Sperry attempted to sell this device to the German navy in 1914, Anschütz-Kaempfe sued for patent infringement. Sperry argued that Anschütz-Kaempfe's patent was invalid because it did not significantly improve on the earlier van den Bos patent. Albert Einstein testified in the case, first agreeing with Sperry but then reversing himself and finding that Anschütz-Kaempfe's patent was valid and that Sperry had infringed by using a specific dampening method. Anschütz-Kaempfe won the case in 1915.
See also
Schuler tuningExternal links
The Gyroscope page on the site dedicated to Arthur Krebs : [rbmn] (in French)Patents
- [U.S. Patent 1279471] : "Gyroscopic compass" (by E. A. Sperry)
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