There is a simple contrivance (for the convenience of travellers) called a Portable Wind Vane, or Anemometer, It is furnished with a compass and bar needle, &c., and will tell the true direction of the wind to within a half point.
56.
Prestel’s Pendulum Anemometer.
Scale about 1/12.
57.
Lind’s Anemometer. Scale about 1/5.
Lind’s Anemometer or Wind Gauge ranks among the earliest forms of instruments designed to estimate the force of the wind. It consists of a glass syphon, the limbs of which are parallel to each other, mounted on a vertical rod, on which it freely oscillates by the action of the vane which surmounts it. The upper end of one limb of the syphon is bent outward at right angles to the main direction, and the action of the vane keeps this open end of the tube always towards the quarter from whence the wind blows. Between the limbs of the syphon is placed a scale graduated from 0 to 3 in inches and 10ths, the zero being in the centre of the scale. When the instrument is used, it is only necessary to fill the tube with water to the zero of the scale, and then expose it to the wind. The natural consequence of wind acting on the surface of the water is to depress it in one limb and raise it in the other, and the sum of the depression and elevation is the height of a column of water which the wind is capable of sustaining at the time of observation. Sudden gusts of wind are apt to produce a jumping effect on the water in the tube, and to diminish this the bend of the syphon is contracted. A brass plate is attached to the foot of the instrument, bearing the letters indicating the cardinal points of the compass, to show the direction of the wind.
Dr. Robinson, of Armagh, introduced an instrument, in 1850, which consists of four hemispherical copper cups attached to the arms of a metal cross. The vertical axis upon which these are secured has at its lower extremity an endless screw placed in gear with a train of wheels and pinions. Each wheel is graduated respectively to 1/10th, 1 mile, 10 miles, 100 miles, 1,000 miles, and these revolve behind a fixed index, the readings of which are taken according to the indications on the dials.
Dr. Robinson entertained the theory that the cups (measuring from their centres) revolved with one-third of the wind’s velocity; and this theory having been fully supported by experiment, due allowance has been made in graduating the wheels so that the true velocity is obtained by direct observation.
In an improved form of this anemometer the hemispherical cups are retained, but the index portion of the instrument consists of two graduated concentric circles, the inner one representing five miles divided into 10ths, and the outer one bearing 100 divisions, each of which is equivalent to five miles. At the top of the dial is a fixed index, which, as the toothed wheel revolves, marks on the inner circle the miles (up to five) and 10ths of miles the wind has travelled, while a movable index, which revolves with the wheel, indicates on the outer circle the passage of every five miles.