Hi everyone, I just purchased a Barr & Stroud FT 37 1942 Rangefinder.
Does anyone have a link to a instruction manual or operation instructions for this?
Thanks, Appreciate your help in advance! Mike
Barr & Stroud FT 37 Rangefinder Help
Re: Barr & Stroud FT 37 Rangefinder Help
try here:NJMC wrote:Hi everyone, I just purchased a Barr & Stroud FT 37 1942 Rangefinder.
Does anyone have a link to a instruction manual or operation instructions for this?
Thanks, Appreciate your help in advance! Mike
http://216.92.248.253/tfs/index.php/Bar ... rs#F.T._37
Re: Barr & Stroud FT 37 Rangefinder Help
Most likely the manual you need is, PAMPHLET No 948 INSTRUCTIONS FOR THE USE AND CARE OF THE BARR AND STROUD NAVIGATIONAL RANGE FINDERTYPE FT 37 BASE 1 METRE OR 80 cm. Unfortunately, I am not at all sure where you might find one.
It should be very similar to the FT 27 though and would operate in much the same way.
This video might help though,
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wXRtj4Hripo
The Dutch Defence Libraries at Breda have a copy and could make a 27page photo copy thereof perhaps.
http://www.worldcat.org/title/instructi ... /658799611
It should be very similar to the FT 27 though and would operate in much the same way.
This video might help though,
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wXRtj4Hripo
The Dutch Defence Libraries at Breda have a copy and could make a 27page photo copy thereof perhaps.
http://www.worldcat.org/title/instructi ... /658799611
Their shoulders held the sky suspended;
They stood and Earth's foundations stay;
What God abandoned these defended;
And saved the sum of things for pay.
Re: Barr & Stroud FT 37 Rangefinder Help
Thank you! Am anxiously waiting for delivery to play with it!
Re: Barr & Stroud FT 37 Rangefinder Help
I own three of these, one of which is in fine working order.
Have you been successful in guessing your way through? If not, I have a handbook, but unless it requires some unusual adjustment, you have only a few simple things to do.
Working from memory...
First off... are the optics clear, and does working the halving adjustment worm cause the images to slide against each other smoothly? If not, you have some refurbishment/cleaning/repair to undertake and I can't help you. BEWARE THAT SOME OF THESE ARE CLAD IN ASBESTOS.
Now you need to adjust the halving alignment so that the two views precisely split the image space so that no part of the view is lost and (conversely) no part of the view appears in both halves of the image. You only need to do this if, when looking through the device you sense that one or the other of these maladjustments is in force. If you see a smooth transition between halves when
This is perhaps best done with the device on a stand, and it can be frustrating. The mechanism for performing this adjustment is likely under a flip-up or rotate-to-open little cover to ward off inadvertent changes in setting. Details vary by the RF.
Once the halving is good, all you need to do is obtain a single range on an object of known distance and adjust the convergence so that the known range is indicated when a "cut" is perfectly set on the RF. The RN suggested using the edge of the moon for this (setting the RF to "infinity"), but I find it more appealing to use something at about 500 yards range.
Once this is done, you are good to go. Ranges obtained will be exceedingly accurate out to 400 yards (say 1% error), pretty darn good to 800 (2% or so), and then fall off rapidly. Over 5,000 yards you can expect 20% errors or so.
Have you been successful in guessing your way through? If not, I have a handbook, but unless it requires some unusual adjustment, you have only a few simple things to do.
Working from memory...
First off... are the optics clear, and does working the halving adjustment worm cause the images to slide against each other smoothly? If not, you have some refurbishment/cleaning/repair to undertake and I can't help you. BEWARE THAT SOME OF THESE ARE CLAD IN ASBESTOS.
Now you need to adjust the halving alignment so that the two views precisely split the image space so that no part of the view is lost and (conversely) no part of the view appears in both halves of the image. You only need to do this if, when looking through the device you sense that one or the other of these maladjustments is in force. If you see a smooth transition between halves when
This is perhaps best done with the device on a stand, and it can be frustrating. The mechanism for performing this adjustment is likely under a flip-up or rotate-to-open little cover to ward off inadvertent changes in setting. Details vary by the RF.
Once the halving is good, all you need to do is obtain a single range on an object of known distance and adjust the convergence so that the known range is indicated when a "cut" is perfectly set on the RF. The RN suggested using the edge of the moon for this (setting the RF to "infinity"), but I find it more appealing to use something at about 500 yards range.
Once this is done, you are good to go. Ranges obtained will be exceedingly accurate out to 400 yards (say 1% error), pretty darn good to 800 (2% or so), and then fall off rapidly. Over 5,000 yards you can expect 20% errors or so.