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Old 05-10-11, 22:21
Lang Lang is offline
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Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Brisbane Australia
Posts: 1,675
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Keith,

Very interesting. I suppose you could turn it on its side to measure the distance to another ship, because they knew the exact length - even enemy ships - but it does not seem to go high enough in the numbers. Maybe fighter pilots used it because they knew the wingspan of the enemy aircraft. Just hold the throttle in the left hand, the stick in the right hand and the rangefinder in the other hand.

Watts is still running, they make electronic navigation equipment now. A lot of our army prismatic compasses were made by Watts.

Lang
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