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    The Perfectionists

    Page 39
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      Whitworth, 108, 109

      Robbins and Lawrence Co., 94n

      robots, 166

      Rolls, Charles, 135, 140–41, 142

      automotive mishap of, 144–45

      on reasons for Rolls-Royce’s success, 154–55

      Royce’s first meeting with, 143–44

      Rolls-Royce jet engines, 196–213, 205

      Advanced Blade Casting Facility for, 207

      Avon, 196n, 199

      Blade Cooling Research Group for, 199, 201

      Comet, 196n, 198, 200

      Quantas Flight 32 and, 174–78, 178, 196, 207–12, 208, 229

      RB211, 203n

      Trent 900-series, 174–78, 178, 205, 212

      Trent XWB, 206

      Rolls-Royce Motors, 6, 129–55

      aircraft engine manufacture begun by, 196n

      author’s own experiences with vehicles, 129–30, 131–35

      Camargue, 134–35

      clandestine repair procedures for, 132

      Decauville as basis for early models, 138–39, 145–46, 158

      demise of, 130, 134–35

      English lexicon and, 155

      founding of, 131, 143

      name of company, 135, 143, 155

      precision’s role at Ford vs., 131, 166–67

      promoted as motoring world’s finest example of precision engineering, 130

      Royce Ten, Twenty, and Thirty models, 138–43, 144–45

      Silver Ghost, see Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost

      Silver Seraph, 129–30

      Silver Spirit, 133–34

      see also Royce, Henry

      Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost, 146–55, 147

      American factory and buyers of, 152

      demonstration car’s tests and long-distance expedition, 148–52

      indestructibly well made, 151–52

      manufacturing process for, 152–54, 166

      originally called Rolls-Royce 40/50, 147–48

      penny and glassware stunts performed on, 150

      produced at rate of two cars a day, 154–55

      quiet engine of, 150

      Royal Air Force (RAF), 196n

      Whittle in employ of, 182, 183–84, 192

      Royal Army Ordnance Corps (RAOC), 8–11

      Royal Automobile Club (RAC), 148n, 149, 150, 151, 152

      Royal Navy, 59, 66–73

      cannon making for, 39, 41–44

      Harrison’s early sea clock trials and, 34, 35–36, 39

      pulley blocks built for, 65–66, 67–71

      sailing vessels of, 66–67

      Royal Society of Arts (RSA), 55–56, 112, 113n, 195

      Royce, Henry, 131, 135–55, 137, 276

      as apprentice in Great Northern Railway workshop, 135–36

      birth and early years of, 135

      crane market and, 136–37

      electrical devices manufactured and sold by, 136

      Ford compared to, 131, 155–56, 158–59, 165–66

      French cars as starting point for, 137–39, 145–46, 158

      Rolls’s overtures to, 140–41, 142, 143

      Royce Ten engineering and, 138–43

      see also Rolls-Royce Motors

      Royce Limited, 136–37

      Russell, Bertrand, 343

      samurai swords, 308

      satellites, 293, 350

      GPS and, 37, 267, 268–69, 270–72, 274

      intelligence-gathering, 236–37, 271, 345n

      “space fence” for detection of, 266

      Sputnik, 259–61, 262, 285

      U.S. Navy Transit navigation system and, 262–64, 263

      see also Hubble Space Telescope

      Sayer, Gerry, 191, 192–94

      Sayers, Dorothy L., Gaudy Night, 255

      Schriever Air Force Base (Colo.), GPS run from, 270–72, 271, 353

      science fiction, 181

      Science Museum (London), 60, 78

      Scott, Walter, 58

      screw making, 63–64

      screws, standardized, 120, 121, 123

      sea watches, made by Harrison (H4 and K1), 31–32, 34–36

      second, defining, 334, 349–50, 352

      Sedgwick, John, 124

      Seiko, 308, 309, 310–22, 316, 351

      all components also made by, 312, 319

      building of, in Ginza district of Tokyo, 312, 313, 313

      first quartz watch made by (Astron), 314, 315–16, 318

      Grand Seiko mechanical watch, 318–19, 319

      name of, 311–12, 313

      principal factory of, in Morioka, 309, 310, 316–22, 319

      reverence for watchmaker’s craft at, 316, 319–22

      Selden (litigant in patent case against Ford), 159–60

      semiconductors, 281, 282, 283, 288

      see also integrated circuitry; microprocessor chips; transistors

      Setright, L. J. K., Drive On!, 129

      sewing machines, 102, 105, 161n

      sextants, 37, 38, 259n

      Shaw, Bernard, 58

      Sheldon, John, 56n

      shilling coin, 22, 51

      shipping industry, timekeeping and, 29–37

      ships:

      powered by turbines, 186

      see also navigation

      Shockley, William, 281–82, 282, 283–84, 287

      Shockley Transistors, 283–84

      shoe, as thing of low tolerance, 18–19

      shoe last lathe, Blanchard’s design for, 19n, 101

      Shovell, Sir Cloudesley, 31

      shrapnel, invention of, 87n

      Shrapnel, Sir Henry, 87n

      silica, LIGO test mass made of, 305, 305–6

      Silicon Valley, 283

      silicon wafers, for microprocessor chips, 283, 292–93, 298

      Singapore Airlines, 211

      Singer, Isaac, 102

      SKF, 33, 170

      Skylake chips, 291, 297–98

      slide rest, invention of, 62–63, 64–65

      smartphones, 228, 276

      Smith, James, Panorama of Science and Art, 75

      Smith and Wesson, 102

      Soviet Union:

      global navigation system of (GLONASS), 270

      Korean Air Lines Flight 007 shot down by, 269

      “space fence,” 266

      spectacles, 221–23

      bifocal lenses in, 222–23

      speed of light, 298

      GPS and, 265, 266, 267, 272

      kilogram defined in terms of, 348

      spherical aberration, 224, 235

      in Hubble’s main mirror, 233, 235, 240–43, 241

      reduced by aspherical lens, 220, 228

      Spitzer Space Telescope, 232n

      Spottsylvania, Battle of (1864), 124

      Springfield, Mass., Rolls-Royce factory in, 152

      Springfield Armory (Mass.), 84, 98, 98, 101, 102, 161n

      Sputnik, 259–61, 262, 285

      plotting location from radio signals of, 260–61

      standardization, 86

      French weaponry and, 86–93

      see also interchangeable parts

      start-ups, invention of term, 284n

      steam, figurative use of word, 74n

      steam engines, 39, 44–52, 304

      Boulton and Watt, 46, 48, 71

      first factory run entirely from output of, 71–72

      invention of precision and, 22, 51–52

      leaking of steam from, 48–49

      Newcomen’s “fire-engine,” 44–45, 46

      principle of, 44

      Watt’s improvements to design of, 45–47

      Watt’s passion for exactitude and, 47–48

      Watt’s patent for, 46, 47

      Wilkinson’s cylinder-boring technique applied to, 39, 44, 45, 46, 47, 49–52, 304, 306

      steam-powered machines, in Crystal Palace exhibition, 116, 117–18

      steel, Whitworth, 124

      Summilux lenses, 220, 224–25, 227, 228

      supersonic passenger planes, 195

      surveying:

      GPS used in, 270

      Great Trigonometric Survey of India, 273n

     
    Switzerland, watch making in, 315, 316

      Talleyrand, Prince of, 333–34, 348

      target, shooting with precision vs. accuracy, 14–16, 15

      taxation of vehicles, 147–48

      telescopes, 222

      James Webb Space Telescope, 231n, 294, 295, 299

      see also Hubble Space Telescope

      temperature:

      bimetallic strips and changes in, 33–34

      kelvin as unit of, 346

      Tennyson, Alfred, Lord, 107

      Terror, 92, 335, 336

      Tesla, Nikola, 347n

      tetsubin (hammered-iron teakettle), 309–10

      Texas Instruments, 288

      textile industry, mechanization of, 74

      Thorne, Kip, 303–4

      three surfaces, grinding and planing to flatness, 75–76

      threshing engines, Westinghouse, 156–58

      time, 28, 347–55

      decimal, 349n

      ephemeris, 350

      human constructs for, 28, 348–50; see also specific units of time

      length of pendulum and, 332–33, 349

      link between gravity and, 354–55

      local, determining from sun and stars, 30n

      longitude meridians as markers of, 30n

      postrevolutionary Republican Calendar and, 333–34

      units of measurement defined in terms of, 347–48

      timekeepers, 28–37

      Ancient Greek predecessor of (Antikythera mechanism), 24–27, 36

      in monasteries, 28–29

      Nature’s offerings of dawn, midday, and dusk and, 28

      navigation across oceans and, 29–37

      railways and, 29, 313–14

      see also clocks; watches

      Times (London), 194

      Timken, 33

      Tizard, Henry, 185n, 189

      tolerances, 16–19

      automation necessitated by shrinkage of, to none whatsover, 206–7

      of camera and lens makers, 227–28

      first formal definition of, 18n

      gauge blocks and, 171

      of gun makers, 89, 100

      and inherently imprecise nature of wood, 17

      low, of shoes, 18–19

      of manufactured metal, glass, or ceramic, 17–18

      of Maudsley’s bench micrometer, 78

      for microprocessor chips, 278, 280

      quantum mechanics and, 212–13

      of screws made with Maudsley and Bramah’s slide rest, 64

      for smartphones, 228

      to which Wilkinson ground out his first cylinder, 51–52

      Whitworth’s measuring device and, 122

      traceability, 104n

      Trailblazer, oil rig location system used by, 255–59, 262

      transistor radios, 282

      transistors, 278, 279, 280

      first working device, 281–82, 283

      integrated circuitry and, 286–91

      Lilienfeld’s concept for, 281

      mesa, 285, 288n

      miniaturization of, 282–83, 284–85, 287–91, 294–98

      Moore’s law and, 279–80, 289, 290–91, 292, 295–96, 297

      planar, invention of, 283, 284–85, 286n, 287, 288n

      reliability issues and, 285

      silicon oxide coating on, 285, 286

      silicon wafer–based, introduction of, 283

      term coined for, 282

      see also microprocessor chips

      Transit navigation system, 262–63, 263

      Treaty of the Metre (1875), 338

      Truman, Harry, 281

      Tuillaume, Maxime, 179

      turbine engines:

      for aircraft, see jet engines

      before jet propulsion, 186

      typewriters, 161n

      United Technologies, 237n

      universe, expansion of, 231

      Ur-Leica, 220, 221, 227

      urushi (Japanese handmade lacquerware), 326–28, 327

      U.S. Naval Research Laboratory (Washington, D.C.), 260

      Vaucanson, Jacques de, 65

      Verne, Jules, 181

      Vernier, Pierre, 120–21

      Vickers Viscount, 198, 200

      Victoria, Queen, 107–11

      opening shot in 1860 Grand Rifle Match fired by, 107–10, 118

      Vivian Grey (Disraeli), 74n

      Voigtländer, 219

      Volkswagen, 130, 135

      volume, standard unit of, 333, 336–37

      wabi-sabi, 314

      Wagner, Herbert, 184

      War of 1812, shortcomings of U.S. Army’s muskets in, 81–85, 86–87

      washing machines, 105

      watches:

      quartz, 314–16, 316, 351

      railways and, 29, 313–14

      sea, made by Harrison (H4 and K1), 31–32, 34–36

      Seiko and, 311–13

      wristwatches, 290, 308

      Watt, James, 45–52, 111, 117

      Newcomen’s engine design improved by, 45–47, 46

      patent awarded to, 46, 47

      personality and demeanor of, 47–48

      Wilkinson’s cylinder-boring technique applied to steam engine of, 39, 44, 45, 46, 47, 49–52, 304, 306

      weaponry:

      handmade, physical shortcomings of, 84

      with inbuilt GPS systems, 269

      nuclear strategic arsenal, 262, 264, 269

      Whitworth’s designs for, 123–24

      see also cannon making; guns; muskets, flintlock

      week, defining, 333–34, 349

      Weiffenbach, George, 259–62

      Weiler, Edward, 234–35, 251

      Wellington, Duke, 58

      Wells, H. G., 181

      Westinghouse threshing engines, 156–58

      Whitney, Eli:

      cotton gin introduced by, 94, 96

      muskets made for U.S. government by, 94–97, 98

      Whittle, Frank, 173, 178, 179, 180–96

      financial backing for, 184–85, 189

      first flight of experimental aircraft fitted with his jet engine, 190, 191–94

      future aircraft envisioned by, 181–82

      honors bestowed on, 194–95

      jet engine designed by, 180, 182–87, 191, 200

      jet engine tested by, 187–90

      patent granted to, 183–84

      in postwar years, 194–96

      as student at Cranwell (Royal Air Force academy), 180–82

      Whittle, Ian, 195–96

      Whitworth, Joseph, 108, 109, 110–11, 112, 118–25

      on American engineering and labor market, 122–23

      apprenticed to Maudslay, 119–20

      armaments produced by, 123–24

      billiard table designed by, 124–25

      flatness of surface plates and, 119–20

      measuring machine created by, 118–19, 120–23

      physical appearance and demeanor of, 118

      rifle made by, used in American Civil War, 123–24

      screw-measuring notation and (BSW), 123

      standardized screws invented by, 120, 121, 123

      steel alloy produced by, 124

      Victoria’s firing of rifle made by, 107–10, 118, 123

      Whitworth Scholarship, Cambridge University, 185n

      Whyte, Lancelot Law, 173, 184–85

      wide-angle lenses, 220, 226, 228

      Wilkins, John, 332–33, 348

      Wilkinson, Isaac, 40

      Wilkinson, John, 23, 38–44, 40, 45, 55, 122, 304–6

      cannon making improved by, 41–44, 87

      cylinder-boring technique of, applied to steam engines, 39, 44, 45, 46, 47, 49–52, 304, 306

      Gainsborough’s portraits of, 38–39

      iron smelting and forging and, 40–41, 43, 49

      obsessed with iron, 23, 47

      patent awarded to, 43, 47, 87

      personality and demeanor of, 47

      Williams, Tennessee, The Glass Menagerie, 255

      Wimperis, Harry, 185n

      Winchester, 102

      Wittgenstein, Ludwig, 345

      W1X engine, 190


      wood, as inherently imprecise material, 17

      Woolwich Royal Arsenal (East London), 59

      Works (Hall), 331

      World War II, 184, 190

      wringing apart metal tiles, 3

      wristwatches, 290, 308

      WU (Whittle Unit), 185

      Yale, Linus, 127

      year, defining, 349, 350

      ytterbium clock, 353

      A Note on the Type

      The typeface mostly employed in this book is a modern interpretation of the classic eighteenth-century Didone serif face Bodoni, and known as Filosofia. This was created in 1996 by the Bratislava-born type designer Zuzana Licko, who, with her Dutch-born husband, Rudy Vanderlans, delighted the typographic world during the closing decades of the twentieth century with a whirlwind of type design, largely occasioned by the invention of the Macintosh computer in 1984. Filosofia, with its slightly bulging serifs and lighter-than-classical-Bodoni vertical lines, and easily recognizable with its below-the-baseline numbers 3,4,5,7, and 9, clearly owes much to one of the most beloved of all Italian faces, but is more amiable and less wearing to the eyes when ranged over texts as lengthy and complex as that of The Perfectionists. I am proud that this book’s designer felt once again able to employ this wonderful typeface, and applaud with gratitude its most gifted creator.

      SW

      About the Author

      SIMON WINCHESTER is the acclaimed author of many books, including The Professor and the Madman, The Men Who United the States, Atlantic, Pacific, The Man Who Loved China, A Crack in the Edge of the World, and Krakatoa, all of which were New York Times bestsellers and appeared on numerous best-of and notable lists. In 2006, Mr. Winchester was made an officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) by Her Majesty the Queen. He lives in western Massachusetts.

      www.simonwinchester.com

      Discover great authors, exclusive offers, and more at hc.com.

      Also by Simon Winchester

      Pacific

      In Holy Terror

      American Heartbeat

      Their Noble Lordships

      Stones of Empire (photographer)

      Outposts

      Prison Diary, Argentina

      Hong Kong: Here Be Dragons

      Korea: A Walk Through the Land of Miracles

      Pacific Rising

      Small World

      Pacific Nightmare

      The River at the Center of the World

      The Professor and the Madman

      The Fracture Zone

      The Map That Changed the World

      Krakatoa

      The Meaning of Everything

      A Crack in the Edge of the World

      The Man Who Loved China

      West Coast: Bering to Baja

      East Coast: Arctic to Tropic

      Skulls

      Atlantic

      The Alice Behind Wonderland

      The Men Who United the States

      When the Earth Shakes

      When the Sky Breaks

      Oxford

     


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