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Mechanical Navigator by F. E. Brandis, Sons and Company

American History Museum

Mechanical Navigator by F. E. Brandis, Sons and Company
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  • Mechanical Navigator by F. E. Brandis, Sons and Company
  • Mechanical Navigator by F. E. Brandis, Sons and Company
  • Mechanical Navigator by F. E. Brandis, Sons and Company
  • Mechanical Navigator by F. E. Brandis, Sons and Company
  • Mechanical Navigator by F. E. Brandis, Sons and Company
  • Mechanical Navigator by F. E. Brandis, Sons and Company
  • Mechanical Navigator by F. E. Brandis, Sons and Company

    Object Details

    maker

    F. E. Brandis, Sons and Company

    Description

    The mechanical navigator is an analog computing device designed to solve problems in spherical trigonometry arising in navigation. In this form, it was designed for instruction in navigation (another version was designed for use at sea). It allowed a student to compute a ship’s location from two sights in one operation.
    The instrument is a mechanical representation of the celestial sphere. A rotating ring mounted vertically on the right side represents the celestial equator. It is calibrated from 0 to 180 by quarter-degrees twice, representing celestial longitude. It also is graduated from 0 to 24 counterclockwise by one minute, and from 0 to XXIV clockwise by one minute. The iron housing inside the vertical circle is calibrated from 0 to 22 by one and labeled by constellation name. A vernier along the edge of this ring marks the meridian of the navigator.
    The instrument has two concentric rings which rotate in perpendicular planes. The outermost represents an hour circle. It is calibrated from 0 to 90 by quarter-degree, four times, and also bears hour lines. The inner ring represents the horizon circle. In addition to degree scales like those of the hour circle, it has is letters for eight cardinal points with sixteen subdivisions between each letter.
    A quadrant affixed perpendicular to the horizon ring, has scales calibrated scale along both sides that run from 0 to 90 degrees, divided to quarter degrees and marked every ten degrees. These represent degrees of latitude. All of these parts rotate on pivots. There are screws for setting the circles.
    The iron base, in the shape of a “T,” has handles at each end. A prior owner made a fitted wooden base for the navigator. The base has two boards with a space between them. Two removable wooden rods labeled in pencil “Left” and “Right” rest between the boards. A mark engraved on the vertical ring reads: F. E. BRANDIS, SONS & CO. (/) BROOKLYN, N.Y. (/) 2877.
    Frederick Ernest Brandis (1845-1916) was a German immigrant who began making and importing instruments in 1871. From the name of the firm, the instrument was made between 1890 and 1916. An eighteen-page typescript of the company’s instructions for using the mechanical navigator is stored in the accession file. According to an account of the instrument published in Engineering News in 1914, the mechanical navigator sold for $2400.
    Another example of the mechanical navigator has long been on loan to the physical sciences collection.
    References:
    Brandis & Sons Mfg. Co., Instruments of Precision . . . Catalogue No. 20 (Brooklyn, New York, n.d.), pp. 294-297.
    "Instrument for Solving Problems of Navigation," Scientific American (July 16, 1910): 44,56,57.
    “An Instrument for Solving Spherical Triangles Mechanically,” Engineering News, vol. 71 #4, January 22, 1914, pp. 180-181.
    Mimeographed instructions describing the instrument and its use in detail, are in the accession file.

    Location

    Currently not on view

    date made

    1890-1916

    ID Number

    MA.314665

    accession number

    208323

    catalog number

    314665

    Object Name

    mechanical navigator

    Physical Description

    metal (overall material)
    wood (base material)

    Measurements

    overall: 26 cm x 44.4 cm x 27.7 cm; 10 1/4 in x 17 15/32 in x 10 29/32 in

    place made

    United States: New York, New York City
    United States: New York, Brooklyn

    See more items in

    Medicine and Science: Mathematics
    Trigonometry
    Science & Mathematics
    Spherical Trigonometry

    Data Source

    National Museum of American History

    Subject

    Mathematics
    Navigation
    Mathematics

    Metadata Usage

    CC0

    Link to Original Record

    https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746ad-d1e1-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

    Record ID

    nmah_1200010

    Discover More

    Models for Spherical Trigonometry

    Trigonometry on the Sphere

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