Osborne
Firefinders Available | |
In 2002, the U.S. Forest Service
San Dimas Technology and Development Center undertook the challenge of finding
a source for new Osborne Firefinders and replacement parts. It was found that
Leupold & Stevens, Inc., the last manufacturer of Osborne firefinders, had
not produced parts for many years and no longer had casting patterns or production
drawings. A set of AutoCAD drawings was then created, and with the help of Jeff
Palmquist, a pattern manufacturer and volunteer lookout on the San Bernardino
National Forest, casting patterns were fabricated. (Jeff is the Team Leader for
Morton Peak Lookout and a member of the FFLA.)
Palmquist Tooling of Southgate,
CA, has been a participant in this project and is now the sole source for Osborne
Fire Finders. In 2003, prototype firefinders were evaluated in Oregon at Odell
Butte and Green Mountain. The bugs with the prototypes and initial production
runs have been worked out, and new Osbornes are now available, as well as replacement
parts for existing firefinders.
Research turned up many variations of
the firefinders that were manufactured from the beginning 1910 stages, with the
re-created firefinder staying closest to the 1934 Osborne. Design
changes included reducing overall weight by making the square base out of aluminum
instead of cast iron, adding nylon inserts vertically and horizontally in the
sight ring eliminating metal to metal rubbing with the azimuth base, and adding
some feet to the bottom of the square base so the firefinder will sit level when
off of the rails.
Free estimates for refurbishing firefinders are available
and a selection of replacement parts is kept on hand. Osborne
replacement parts price list (Dec. 2005): Complete Osborne $3960.00
Lot of 10 complete sets $36,432.00 Front sight assembly $372.00 Rear
sight assembly $410.00
| Sight
bearing ring w/ inserts $367.00 Sight ring assembly $953.00
Tape assembly
$144.00
Tape piece only $95.00
Aluminum map disc $31.00
Rear Sight Sliding Peep Sight $138.00
|
Palmquist
Tooling Inc. (Jeff Palmquist) 8120 Otis St, South Gate, CA 90280 323-567-1479;
Palmtool@aol.com Jeff welcomes questions
and comments. |
Kresek
Firefinder Alidade | - An
affordable, simple to operate lookout fire plotting map board
- Less
then 1/10th the price of an Osborne Firefinder
- The
ideal alternative choice for USFS recreation rental lookouts
- Accurate
to within 1 degree azimuth reading
- 24-inch
diameter circle
- Alidade
board moveable to avoid room obstructions
- Slides
on 24 x 24 3-track base tabletop (fits Osborne)
- 360-degree
azimuth circle graduated in easy to read 1-degree increments
- Map
circle is 23-1/2 diameter (2 larger than Osborne)
- Custom
ordered with your 1/2=1 mile base map already attached (you provide map
of your choice, we add alignment landmarks, townships, and install and calibrate)
- Price:
$295.00 FOB Spokane, WA
Fire Lookout Museum 123 W. Westview Spokane,
WA 99218 509-466-9171 rkresek@comcast.net
| 
Map
is laminated in acrylic safety glass to prevent fading and damage Simple
rifle-type sights feature elevated front and rear posts on center pivot point Distance
from lookout to fire is calibrated in 1/2 etched segments on metal sight
arm Weather-proofed
with three coats marine spar varnish on 3/4 exterior wood Total
shipping weight: 32 pounds
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| History
of the Osborne Firefinder |
WILLIAM
BUSHNELL "Bush" OSBORNE, Jr., as a young graduate forester, went to
work for the U.S. Forest Service in 1909 on the Oregon National Forest at Mount
Hood.
In 1911 he invented an alidade he called the "firefinder"
and tested it at 8 locations in Oregon and SW Washington. The original instrument
was 14" across, round, with a map of the surrounding area, and each of 360
degrees etched around the rim. This disc was secured to an 8-sided 1/8" steel
base which was in turn secured firmly to a tree stump. A brass sighting mechanism
consisting of a rear vertical slit and a front vertical horse hair stretched tight,
pivoted precisely in the center of the circle. The geographical location of the
lookout point was situated exactly in the center of the circular map. An arrow
etched beneath the roar sight corresponded with the compass reading when the sights
were lined up on a distant smoke. This first Osborne Firefinder was commercially
produced in 1913 by Fred Leupold and Adam Volpel (Leupold-Volpel & Co.) at
their scientific instrument manufacturing facility in Portland. The U.S. Forest
Service purchased fewer than 100 of these 1913 Model Osborne firefinders.
In 1914 the center-pivot sighting mechanism was abandoned in favor of a circular
outer ring with the original fore and aft sights affixed to it. A cast iron base
with a round recessed rim permitted the sights to be moved freely around the rim.
0° was positioned true south from the lookout location. To prove this instrument,
"Bush" Osborne placed it atop Oregon's tallest volcano, Mount Hood the
following summer. In one month lookout Elijah "Lige" Coalman spotted
and reported 131 fires with this instrument!
In 1915, Osborne again modified
his "firefinder" sighting mechanism. The 1915 model featured a 0-power
scope similar to those used on a rifle, instead of the original fore and aft upright
sights, to peer through. Precisioned calibration permitted obtaining azimuth readings
to l/60th of 1°; and a vertical angle reading in 1/10th of 1° accuracy.
Several hundred of the 1915 Osborne Firefinders were produced by Leupold-Volpel
Co. In 1917, Bush Osborne again gave his Firefinder a radical change. Its
width was enlarged from 14" to 24" across. Its weight was increased
from 10 pounds to 70#, including the 3-railed track it sat upon. It featured rugged
alidade sights front and back, using the concept of the 1913-1914 models; however,
the front sight is equipped with a thin brass tape which could be moved up and
down freely with a thumb wheel. As this wheel was turned back and forth while
the observer sighted through the rear sight slot at the distant topography, a
pencil attached to a sliding gear-driven arm could draw the panoramic features
of the horizon. Thus, a panoramic picture could be drawn to accompany "seen
area" maps made by the firewatcher. About a hundred 1917 Osborne Firefinders
were manufactured by Leupold-Volpel.
In 1934, Osborne again radically
changed only the sighting assembly, to include a far more simple mechanism. The
rear sight now included "+" and "-" vertical scales and two
sets of cross threads of horse hair, so that accurate vertical readings could
be made on fires both below and above the lookout's elevation. Leupold-Volpel
Co. (known since 1942 as Leupold & Stevens) manufactured more than three thousand
of the lighter weight 55 pound 1934 Osborne Firefinder, until it ceased to produce
the instrument in 1989. For a time prior to that, the A. Lietz Co. of San Francisco
also manufactured the Osborne Firefinder in small quantity. The 1934 Osborne Firefinder
is the most widely used fire plotting instrument in the world today. It is in
use across America, and in many foreign nations on at least four continents. They
were last featured for sale new in the 1991 Forestry Suppliers catalog for $3,495
each.
by Ray Kresek, Fire Lookout Museum, Spokane, WA
The
Vertical Angle scale on an Osborne Firefinder was meant for use in conjunction
wih the Panoramic Photo set for that lookout. The set of three panoramic photos
have a very thin horizontal line which represents 0, or exact same elevation on
distant hills as that of the lookout. The sliding peepsight on the rear sight
registers + and - readings. + would be higher than you; - lower. This reading,
along with the azimuth reading on a smoke base allowed the dispatcher to pull
the Pan set for your lookout, and with a transparent scale, plot the exact location
on the photo. These photo sets measure 6" tall by 36" wide; contact
prints same size as the infrared film negative; incredible imagery, for the 1930s
when most of them were filmed. With a magnifying glass, dispatchers could actually
see the single tree 4 miles away that was burning! It was so good, I don't know
why they don't use it anymore....
The metal tape extending across the
map on the Osborne is nothing more than a steel tape measure, in inches starting
at the center (lookout location). When using a standard 1/2" scale Forest
map, it is easy to determine distance to the smoke. Ray Kresek Back
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