Twister_Ken
Well-Known Member
Just re-reading some of the Patrick O'Brian stuff. Aubrey seems quite fond of racing to the mast head with his telescope to have a good look at the opposition. Or sending a midshipman aloft with his best glass for the same purpose. Is this sort of behaviour a figment of Mr O'Brian's excellent imagination? Even with a pair of modern binoculars from deck level it's difficult to hold the image of a distant vessel steady in any sort of a seaway. At the top of a mast with a telescope, penduluming through a girt big arc, it must have been nigh on impossible.
Subsidiary question. What sort of magnification factor did 19th century ships' telescopes have?
<hr width=100% size=1><A target="_blank" HREF=http://www.writeforweb.com/twister1>Let's Twist Again</A>
Subsidiary question. What sort of magnification factor did 19th century ships' telescopes have?
<hr width=100% size=1><A target="_blank" HREF=http://www.writeforweb.com/twister1>Let's Twist Again</A>