SPREADING THE EYES FAR APART
Now the ordinary range-finder, used in the army and in the navy, is an arrangement for spreading the eyes apart to a considerable distance. Of course the eyes are not actually spread, but their vision is. The range-finder is really a double telescope. The barrel is not pointed at an object, but it is held at right angles to it. You look into the instrument at the middle of the barrel and out of it at the two ends. A system of mirrors or prisms makes this possible. The range-finder may be a yard or more in length, which is equivalent to spreading your eyes a yard or more apart. Now, the prisms or object-glasses at the ends of the tube are adjustable, so that they will turn in until they focus directly on the target whose range you wish to find, and the angle through which these glasses are turned gives a measure of the distance of the target. The whole thing is calculated out so that the distance in feet, yards, or meters, or whatever the measure may be, is registered on a scale in the range-finder. Ordinarily only one eye is used to look through the range-finder, because the system of mirrors is set to divide the sight of that one eye and make it serve the purposes of two. That leaves the other eye free to read the scale, which comes automatically into view as the range-finder is adjusted for the different ranges.
On the battle-ships enormous range-finders are used. Some of them are twenty feet long. With the eyes spread as far apart as that and with a microscope to read the scale, you can imagine how accurately the range can be found, even when the target is miles away. But on land such big range-finders cannot conveniently be used; they are too bulky. When it is necessary to get the range of a very distant object, two observers are used who are stationed several hundred yards apart. These observers have telescopes which they bear upon the object, and the angle through which they have to turn the telescope is reported by telephone to the battery, where, by a rapid calculation, it is possible to estimate the exact position of the target. Then the gun is moved up or down, to the right or to the left, according to the calculation. The observers have to creep as near to the enemy as possible and they must be up high enough to command a good view of the target. Sometimes they are placed on top of telegraph poles or hidden up a tall tree, or in a church steeple.