- Gyro gunsight
A gyro gunsight is a type of gunsight in which target lead (the amount of aim-off in front of a moving target) and bullet drop are allowed-for automatically, the sight incorporating a
gyroscopic mechanism that computes the necessarydeflection s required to ensure a hit on the target. The sight was developed during theSecond World War foraircraft use duringaerial combat .The sight features both a fixed and a moving graticule, the fixed one signifying the direction the guns are pointing (in effect, the same as a 'normal', non-gyro, sight), the moving one the "corrected" aiming point. Providing the pilot/gunner uses the correct "moving" graticule then a hit on the target is highly likely.
History
After tests with two experimental sights which had begun in
1939 , the first production gyro gunsight was the British "Mark I Gyro Sight" (left), developed at Farnborough in1941 , and prototypes of which were tested in aSupermarine Spitfire and the turret of aBoulton Paul Defiant in the early part of that year. With the successful conclusion of these tests the sight was put into production byFerranti , the first limited-production versions being available by the spring of 1941, with the sights being first used operationally againstLuftwaffe raids on Britain in July the same year. The sight had a number of drawbacks however, including requiring the pilot/gunner to look through a small aperture, so production was postponed and work started on an improved sight which would incorporate a normalreflector system instead. This new sight became the "Mark II Gyro Sight", which was first tested in late 1943 with production examples becoming available later in the same year.The "Mark II" was also subsequently produced in the US as the "K-14" (USAAF) and "Mk18" (Navy)
The
radar -aimed AGLT Village Inn tail turret incorporated a Mark II Gyro Sight and this turret was fitted to some Lancaster bombers towards the end ofWorld War II .External links
* [http://forum.axishistory.com/viewtopic.php?p=160621&sid=51c60b7d43f1923c2bb9a94c598a6ff1 A fuller explanation of the gyro gunsight]
* [http://www.429sqn.ca/acmgs.htm RAF, Luftwaffe and USAAF gunsights of WW2]
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