Interesting to see how they arranged the staggered wipers on the General Radio Unit.
Does anyone know what a non-Kelvin Varley decade divider is called? I have a Muirhead D-801-D four decade "Voltage Dividing Resistance", it is externally the same as a Kelvin Varley divider, ie. It's a potentiometer but uses a different operating principle:
Instead of each decade bridging two resistors on the previous one, on the Muirhead each decade replaces one resistor on the previous one... It actually has roughly twice the number of resistors per decade (apart from the last one). Each switch has 2 wipers, one selects from a chain of up to 9 resistors below the tap and the other selects from a chain of up to 9 resistors above. Eg, when set to 5 it selects 5 resistors below and 4 resistors above - the next decade replacing the 'missing' resistor.
This arrangement means that there are nearly double the number of resistors (18 matched resistors per decade) and subsequent decades must accurately match the resistance of one resistor on the previous decade (unlike the Kelvin Varley).
Does anyone know what this arrangement is called? I would guess that it was built in the '50s so well after the Kelvin Varley divider was invented. Accuracy is very good, still within about 0.02% on ratio as far as I can measure.
Here's a link I pulled off the web for general description and external photo. I'll need to open it up if anyone is interested in internal photos.
http://rochesteravionicarchives.co.uk/collection/general-purpose/4-decade-voltage-dividing-resistance-box