Baillie weight-detaching sounding apparatus for deep sea sounding

Made:
1888 in England
designer:
C W Baillie

Baillie weight-detaching sounding apparatus, designed by Navigating Lieutenant C. W. Baillie, made 1888.

The Baillie sounder’s sinking weights were placed on the sounding tube and suspended by the ring and wire to two shoulders that projected from the sides of a sliding rod working in the upper part of the sounding tube. On touching sea bottom and the sounding line slackening, the sinker weights drew the sliding rod downwards. The shoulders passing within the sounding tube threw the wire off and the weights were released. The lower portion of the tube, to which a valve was attached, received the specimen of the sea bottom.

The weights were adjusted according to the ocean depth. With three hundredweight (152 kg) sinker weights it could take well over an hour for the sounder to reach bottom in 4000 fathoms (7315 metres).

Details

Category:
Oceanography
Object Number:
1918-20
type:
mechanical sounders
credit:
Admiralty Hydrographic Office