Now that we've got pictures of two different versions of the torpedo targetting solver, (although one looks cruder than the other, you can see the similarity between the two, perhaps one is early war and the other is late war?), can anybody figure out exactly how they work?
I'm also curious as to how they were used.
I'd always thought there was a sort of (mechanical?) computer attached to the bottom of the UZO that solved for torpedo angles but perhaps this wasn't the case?
Did an officer take the readings off the UZO/periscope and then spin the rings on what seems to be a sort of protractor/slide rule calculator and then feed those numbers into the machine inside the CT? Or was this a backup device in case a conneciton between the UZO and the machine in the CT failed?
I remember when I was in the artillery decades ago, before computers, we had specialized acrylic slide rules and tables that we calculated the angles and elevations, altitudes and wind deflections, etc, etc, etc to feed back to the guns and it was amazing how fast we could get with a little bit of practice.