States and foreign countries. It is now on
exhibit at the National Air Museum of the
Smithsonian Institution in Washington,
D.C:
During World War II the Abrams
School of Aerial Surveying and Photo
Interpretation was formed for the training
BAUSCH
The Bausch & Lomb Optical Co. has
pioneered in the development of and pro-
duction of a great many products in the
field of optics and scientific optical instru-
ments in the course of its 100 years exist-
ence. It is natural, therefore, that this
company should have continued the de-
velopment and improvement of the Multi-
plex system of Aerial Mapping Equipment
in this country soon after its inception in
Europe.
The first Multiplex equipment manu-
factured by Bausch & Lomb Optical Co.,
about 1936, was designed for use with
aerial photography taken with the Altimar
lens of 81 inch focal length and a total
field coverage of 68?. A relatively small
quantity of this normal-angle equipment
was produced for military use, but was
very soon replaced by wide-angle equip-
ment which was designed to accommodate
photography with the newly developed
Bausch & Lomb Metrogon lens, with a
field coverage of a little more than 90°.
This wider angle offered the advantages
of a more favorable base-height ratio
which increased the accuracy of the sys-
tem, and greater economy of operation by
reducing the number of models, and
reducing the number of control and pass
points. The Multiplex equipment was used
very extensively by the military agencies
and the U. S. Geological Survey, but it was
not until 1946 that it was possible to make
it available to commercial mapping com-
panies and to foreign government agencies.
It is now being employed by a number of
private companies as well as government
agencies in this and other countries.
Another important photogrammetric
instrument developed by Bausch & Lomb
Optical Co. is the Autofocus Rectifier,
completed in 1948. It is used in the recti-
fication of aerial photographs for the pro-
duction of controlled mosaics, and accom-
modates camera tilts up to 20° with mag-
34 HISTORY OF PHOTOGRAMMETRY IN THE UNITED STATES
of military personnel in photogrammetry
for the United States Marine Corps at
Lansing, Michigan.
Talbert Abrams served as Vice President
of the American Society of Photogram-
metry in 1950 and President of the Society
in 1951.
AND LOMB
nifications varying from (.6) to (3.5).
An improved model offering greater
stability and other mechanical advantages
has just been completed and will be in
production in 1953.
Improvement in photographic lenses
and the continued increase in flight alti-
tudes, as well as the highway construction,
city planning, and cadastral surveys has
produced the need for a plotting instru-
ment of longer projection distance than
the Multiplex equipment affords. À plot-
ter, which employs the same basic pro-
jection principle as the Multiplex, having
a projection distance of 720 m/m, and
employing 9 X9 diapositives produced by
contact printing, has been recently de-
signed for the U. S. Corps of Engineers.
This instrument is a modification of the
Kelsh Plotter designed by Harry Kelsh
which has already proved its usefulness in
photogrammetric programs.
The development of photogrammetric
instruments in the U. S. is still in its
infancy. In looking to the future Bausch &
Lomb Optical Co. is maintaining a photo-
grammetric section employing a staff of
engineers who are constantly striving to
improve the present equipment and to
develop new instruments to meet the de-
mands of mapping agencies as new re-
quirements arise.
Research at various levels is being
carried on by photogrammetrists through-
out the country. New theories and new
designs are constantly being presented.
No instrument manufacturer can possibly
follow every lead, nor can it design and
produce an instrument on its own initiative
that will be universal in satisfying the
needs of all requirements of all mapping
agencies. In so far as it is possible it is the
the policy of the Bausch & Lomb Optical
Co. to keep abreast and ahead of photo-
grammetric development and to do its
part in the future as it has in the past in
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