Transmitting Station

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A Transmitting Station (or T.S. or TS), as it was termed by the Royal Navy; it was called a "Plotting Room" in American naval parlance, is a room deep within a large ship where communications and calculations pertaining to gunnery are worked. It serves as a nexus for command and communication.

Capital ships in the Royal Navy tended to have 2 TSes fitted (one fore and and aft) prior to King George V and Queen Mary which inaugurated a switch to a single T.S.[1]. At least some ships with 6-in guns in the secondary battery, however, had an additional T.S. to support their fire.

The size and sophistication of these compartments and their equipment varied by the nationality, date of design and type of vessel; those of the later and larger ships of the most technologically advanced nations boasted the largest dimensions, and were richest in their number of instruments and attendant personnel.

Function in British Capital Ships

A transmitting station was generally understood as the font from which range and deflection and order data emanated for use by the guns, directors and control positions of the ship. To accomplish this task, the TS had to be a place

  • fed with wiring to receive information
  • housing equipment and people within to convert this information into range, deflection and order information
  • equipped with cables by which the range, deflection and order information could be sent outward to the guns, directors and control positions that would require it.

Let us for the moment avoid worrying about the second item, as the means by which the continuous range and deflections were generated evolved over time, generally culminating in the use of a Dreyer Fire Control Table whose adornments would themselves be refined over time. Let's examine the TS as a black box with a set of inputs and outputs.

Inputs

To calculate ranges and deflections, the TS and its crew required information to develop a firing hypothesis, and this mandated that it also serve as the agency to which all

were directed. These arrived over data circuits or verbally by navyphone or voicepipe. Generally, each such report was delivered by protocols or by distinct circuits such that the point of origin was clearly identified.

It was the TS's task to relay some of these to the appropriate audience or to process them by whatever means were en mode before handing on the range and deflection for shooting.

Outputs

No matter the means of calculation, the TS was required to

  • report a stream of ranges and deflections to be used in firing
  • relay or originate and transmit orders for how to carry on
  • in director firing, relay angles for elevation and training and firing key impulses, or signal by a gong when to fire

The British appreciated that a ship might be called upon to engage more than one target, and this implied that there had to be more than one channel over which such data could be broadcast. They called each separate group of guns that might be addressed in this manner a control group and accorded each a set of transmitters for range, deflection, and order information. By 1914[2], it was understood

[TO BE CONTINUED - TONE]

See Also

Footnotes

  1. Handbook for Fire Control Instruments, 1914, p. 51.
  2. Handbook for Fire Control Instruments, 1914, p. 9.

Bibliography

  • Admiralty, Gunnery Branch (1914). Handbook for Fire Control Instruments, 1914. G. 01627/14. C.B. 1030. Copy 1235 at The National Archives. ADM 186/191.