Page:Popular Science Monthly Volume 13.djvu/299

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RECENT EXPERIMENTS ON FOG-SIGNALS.
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still superior to the gun. On the 6th of August, at St. Ann's, the 4 ounce and 8-ounce rockets proved superior to the siren. On the Shambles Light-vessel, when a pressure of 13 pounds was employed to sound the siren, the rockets proved greatly superior to that instrument. Proceeding along the sea-margin at Flamborough Head, Mr. Edwards states that at a distance of 114 mile, with the 18-pounder gun hidden behind the cliffs, its report was quite unheard, while the 4-ounce rocket, rising to an elevation which brought it clearly into view, yielded a powerful sound in the face of an opposing wind.

On the evening of February 9, 1877, a remarkable series of experiments was made by Mr. Prentice, at Stowmarket, with the gun-cotton rocket. From the report with which he has kindly furnished me I extract the following particulars. The first column in the annexed statement contains the name of the place of observation, the second its distance from the firing-point, and the third the result observed:

Stoke Hill, Ipswich 10 miles Rockets clearly seen and sounds distinctly heard 53 minutes after the flash.
Melton 15 " Signals distinctly heard. Thought at first that sounds were reverberated from the sea.
Framlingham 18 " Signals very distinctly heard, both in the open air and in a closed room. Wind in favor of sound.
Stratford. St. Andrews 19 " Reports loud; startled pheasants in a cover close by.
Tuddenham. St. Martin 10 " Reports very loud; rolled away like thunder.
Christ Church Park 11 " Report arrived a little more than a minute after flash.
Nettlested Hall 6 " Distinct in every part of observer's house. Very loud in the open air.
Biklestone 6 " Explosion very loud, wind against sound.
Nacton 14 " Reports quite distinct mistaken—by inhabitants for claps of thunder.
Alboro 25 " Rockets seen through a very hazy atmosphere; a rumbling detonation heard.
Capel Mills 11 " Reports heard within and without the observer's house. Wind opposed to sound.
Lawford 1512 " Reports distinct: attributed to distant thunder.

In the great majority of these cases, the direction of the sound inclosed a large angle with the direction of the wind. In some cases, indeed, the two directions were at right angles to each other. It is needless to dwell for a moment on the advantage of a signal commanding ranges such as these.

The explosion of substances in the air, after having been carried to a considerable elevation by rockets, is a familiar performance. In 1873 the Board of Trade actually proposed a light-and-sound rocket as a signal of distress, which proposal was subsequently realized, but in a form too elaborate and expensive for practical use. The idea of the gun-cotton rocket with a view to signaling in fogs is, I believe, wholly due to