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Chip log - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Chip log

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A chip log, also called common log, ship log or just log, is a navigation tool used by mariners to estimate speed of a vessel through water.

Contents

[edit] Construction

Diagram of a chip log
Diagram of a chip log
Ship log and associated kit.  The reel of log-line is clearly seen. The timing sandglass is in the upper left and the log in the lower left.  The small light-coloured wooden pin and plug form a release mechanism for two lines of the bridle.  From the Musée de la Marine, Paris.
Ship log and associated kit. The reel of log-line is clearly seen. The timing sandglass is in the upper left and the log in the lower left. The small light-coloured wooden pin and plug form a release mechanism for two lines of the bridle.
From the Musée de la Marine, Paris.

A chip log consists of a wooden board attached to a line (the log-line). The log-line has a number of knots tied in it at uniform spacings. The log-line is wound on a reel to allow it to be paid out easily in use.

Over time, the log was standardized in construction. The shape is a quarter circle, or quadrant and the log-line is attached to the board with a bridle of three lines connected to the vertex and to the two ends of the quadrant's arc. In order to ensure that the log submerges and is oriented correctly, the bottom of the log is weighted with lead. This provides for more resistance in the water and a more accurate and repeatable reading of speed. The bridle is attached in such a way that a strong tug on the log-line results in one or two of the bridle's lines releasing, allowing the log to be retrieved with relative ease.

[edit] Usage

When the navigator wished to determine the speed of his vessel, a sailor dropped the log over the stern of the ship. The log would act as a drogue and remain roughly in place while the vessel moved away. The log-line was allowed to run out for a fixed period of time. The speed of the ship was indicated by the length of log-line passing over the stern during that time.

[edit] Origins

The first known device to measure speed is often claimed to be the Dutchman's Log. An object that would float was thrown overboard and the time required to pass between two points on deck was measured with a sandglass. However, the first reference to a Dutchman's log is in 1623, after the ship log.[1] The Dutchman's log could be used with a brass tobacco box, rectangular with rounded ends. This box had tables on it to convert log timing to speed.[2][3]

The log has been used by mariners for a long time. The first occurrence of a description of the device in print was in A Regiment for the Sea by William Bourne in 1574.

Initially, the log-line was not knotted and the length was measured directly on the line. With the introduction of the nautical mile as a standard unit of measure at sea in the 15th century, the line began to be marked at equal intervals proportional to the nautical mile and to the time interval used for measurement. Initially, the markings were in the form of knots in the line. Later, knotted cords were worked into the log-line.

Originally, the distance between marks was 7 fathoms or 42 feet used with a sandglass with a 30 second running time. Later refinements in the length of the nautical mile caused the distance between knots to be changed. Eventually, the distance was set to 47 feet, 3 inches (14.4 meters) for a standard glass of 28 seconds.

The name of the unit knot, for nautical mile per hour, was derived from this method of measurement.

[edit] Accuracy and considerations by the navigator

The use of a log did not give an exact measure of speed. A number of considerations had to be taken into account, for example:

  • the amount of following sea
  • the effect of currents
  • stretch of the line
  • inaccuracies in the measurement of elapsed time. Sandglasses were affected by ambient temperature, humidity, and sea state.

Frequent measurements helped in mitigating some of these inaccuracies by averaging out individual errors, and experienced navigators could determine their speed through the water with a fair degree of accuracy.

[edit] More modern logs and replacements

Modern version of a mechanical log
Modern version of a mechanical log

Mechanical chip logs, operating on physical principles in a manner similar to a car's odometer, were eventually developed and replaced the traditional chip log.

Today, the most accurate means of maritime speed measurement comes from Doppler measurement, either derived acoustically by use of Doppler Sonar or radio interferometrically by Doppler measurement of satellite signals such as those from Global Positioning System (GPS). Most commercial GPS systems are not configured to operate in this mode, however.

[edit] References

  1. ^ May, William Edward, A History of Marine Navigation, G. T. Foulis & Co. Ltd., Henley-on-Thames, Oxfordshire, 1973, ISBN 0 85429 143 1
  2. ^ Turner, Gerard L'E., Antique Scientific Instruments, Blandford Press Ltd. 1980 ISBN 0-7137-1068-3
  3. ^ The ‘Dutchman’s Log’ or the Seaman’s Tobacco Box of Pieter Holm
  • The Oxford Companion to Ships and the Sea, Peter Kemp ed., 1976 pp 192-193. ISBN 0-586-08308-1

[edit] External links

  • Chip Log pattern on the webpage of the Navy & Marine Living History Association, Inc. note: the distance given on this pattern is 33 1/3 feet, the modern distance is 47 1/4 feet.


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