VACUUM. A space utterly empty, even of air or vapour. VADMEL. Coarse woollen manufacture of the Orkneys. (See Wadmarel.) VAIL, To. An old word signifying to lower, to bend in token of submission; as, "Vail their top-gallants." Thus in the old play George a-Green, "Let me alone, my lord; I'll make them vail their plumes." VAKKA. A large canoe of the Friendly Islands, with an out-rigger. VALE, or Dale (which see). Also, gunwale.—To vale, was an old term for "dropping down," as in a river. VALUATION. In cases of restitution after property has been sold, and account of sales cannot be obtained, it may be taken at the invoice price, and 10 per cent profit; but this mode of estimating it does not include freight, even though the ship and cargo belong to the same person. VALUED POLICY. Is where a value has been set upon the ships or goods insured, and this value inserted in the policy in nature of liquidated damages, to save the necessity of proving it, in case of a total loss. VALVES. See under their respective particular names. VAMBRACE. Armour for the front of the arm. VAN [formerly vant, contracted from avant]. That part of a fleet, army, or body of men, which is advanced in the first line or front.—Vanguard. The advanced division. VANE-SPINDLE. The pivot on which the mast-head-vane turns; it should never be made of metal, lest it attract lightning, unless the masts be fitted with Sir W. Snow Harris's conductors. VANFOSSE. A wet ditch at the outer foot of the glacis. VANG. A rope leading from the end of the gaff to the rail, one on each side, so that the two form guys attached to the outer ends of the gaffs to steady them, and when the sails are not set keep them amidships. VANGEE. A contrivance for working the pumps of a vessel by means of a barrel and crank-breaks. VARIATION. A term applied to the deviation of the magnetic needle or compass, from the true north point towards either east or west; called also the declination. The variation of the needle is properly defined as the angle which a magnetic needle suspended at liberty makes with the meridian line on a horizontal plane; or an arc of the horizon, comprehended between the true and the magnetic meridian. (See Annual Variation.) VARIATION CHART. The well-known chart produced by Halley, whereon a number of curved lines show the variation of the compass in the places they pass through. The admiralty variation chart has been brought to great perfection. VARIATION OF THE VARIATION. Is the change in the declination of the needle observed at different times in the same place. VEER A BUOY IN A SHIP'S WAKE, To. To slack out a rope to which a buoy has been attached, and let it go astern, for the purpose of bringing up a boat, or picking up a man who may have fallen overboard. VEER AND HAUL, To. To gently tauten and then slacken a rope three times before giving a heavy pull, the object being to concentrate the force of several men. The wind is said to veer and haul when it alters its direction; thus it is said, to veer aft, and haul forward. VEER AWAY THE CABLE, To. To slack and let it run out. VEERING CABLE, The. That cable which is veered out in unmooring, and not unspliced or unshackled in clearing hawse. VEGA. a LyrÆ. The bright lucida of the old northern constellation Lyra. VEIN. The clear water between the openings of floes of ice. The same as ice-lane. Also, a very limited current of wind—a cat's-paw. VELOCITY. In naval architecture, designing for velocity is giving that form to a ship's body by which she will pass through the water in the quickest space of time. VELOCITY OF TIDE OR CURRENT, depends on several circumstances. First, the tide varies with the state of the moon, running strongest at the springs, and the force of the ebb is much increased by rains, land freshes, &c. The currents also vary, especially when wind and tide combine to accelerate their action. VENDUE MASTER. A commercial and marine auctioneer. VENE-SEANDES. The old commercial term for Venetian sequins. VENT. In artillery, the small aperture near the breech by which the fire of the priming is communicated to the charge. VENT-BIT. A peculiar augur or screw gimlet used for clearing the vent of a gun when obstructed. VENT-FIELD of a Gun. The raised tablet in the metal near the breech in which the vent is bored. VENTILATOR. The name of various machines contrived to expel the foul air from the store-rooms and hold, and introduce fresh in its stead. VENT-PIECE. The movable fitment which closes the breech and contains the vent in Armstrong breech-loading guns. VENTRAL FIN. The posterior pair of fins under the body of fishes, corresponding to the hind legs of terrestrial quadrupeds. VENUS. One of the inferior planets, and the second in order of distance from the sun. (See Transit of Venus.) VERIFICATION OF SHIP'S PAPERS. In this necessary process it VERITAS. A register of shipping established in Paris, on the principle of Lloyd's List. VERNAL EQUINOX. The point where the sun crosses the equator, going north. It is opposite the place of the autumnal equinox. (See Equinoxes.) VERNIER, or Nonius. A graduated scale for the measurement of minute divisions, especially on the arcs of astronomical instruments, sextants, &c. The thousandth part of a degree can be taken by the naked eye; the ten thousandth by a microscope. VERSED SINE. In geometry, is the part of the radius intercepted between the arc and its sine. VERTEX. The zenith, the point overhead; the apex of a conical mountain. VERTICAL ANGLES. Opposite angles made by two lines cutting or crossing each other, and are always equal. (See Angle of the Vertical.) VERTICAL FIRE. In artillery, that directed upward at such an angle as that it will fall vertically, or nearly so, to its destination. It includes all elevations above 30°, though the most usual is 45°. It is very effective with shells; but with small balls, as proposed by Carnot and others, who have ill reckoned the retardation by the atmosphere, it is insignificant. VERTICAL FORCE. The centre of displacement is also that of the centre of vertical force that the water exerts to support the immersed vessel. Also, the dip of the magnetic needle, measured by vibrations of the dipping needle over certain arcs, and referable to some fixed position, as Greenwich, where corresponding observations with the same needle have been previously, as well as subsequently, made. VERTICITY. The tendency of the loadstone to point towards the magnetic north and south. VESSEL. A general name for all the different sorts of ships, boats, &c., navigated on the ocean or on rivers and canals. VETAYLE. An archaism for victuals. VICE-ADMIRAL. The rank in the fleet next to that of an admiral; he carries his flag at the fore. VICE-ADMIRALTY COURTS. Branches of the High Court of Admiralty, instituted for carrying on the like duties in several of our colonies, prize-courts, &c. (See Admiralty, High Court of.) VICE-CONSUL. An officer appointed in sea-ports to aid the consul in VICE-NAIL. A screw. VICTUALLER. A vessel which carries provisions. In the early age of the navy, each man-of-war had a victualler especially attached to her; as, in Henry VIII.'s reign, we find the Nicholas Draper, of 140 tons and 40 men, was victualler to the Trinity Sovereign; the Barbara of Greenwich to the Gabriel Royal, and so on. VICTUALLING-BILL. A custom-house document, warranting the shipment of such bonded stores as the master of an outward-bound merchantman may require for his intended voyage. VICTUALLING-BOOK. A counterpart of the ship's open list, which is kept by the purser, to enable him to make the necessary entries in it. VICTUALLING-YARDS for the Royal Navy. Large magazines where provisions and similar stores are deposited, conveniently contiguous to the royal dockyards. The establishments in England and Ireland are at Deptford, Gosport, Plymouth, and Cork; and abroad at Malta, Gibraltar, Cape of Good Hope, Jamaica, Halifax, Trincomalee, and Hongkong. VIDETTE. See Vedette. VI ET ARMIS. With force of arms. VIGIA [Sp. look-out]. A hydrographical warning on a chart to denote that the pinnacle of a rock, or a shoal, may exist thereabout. VINTINER [from vigintinarius]. An officer in our early fleet who commanded a company of twenty men. VIOL OR VOYOL BLOCK. A large single-sheaved block through which the messenger passed when the anchor was weighed by the fore or jeer capstan; its block was usually lashed to the main-mast. This voyol-purchase was afterwards improved thus: the voyol-block was securely lashed to the cable at the manger-board, the jeer-fall rove through it, and brought to the jeer-capstan, and the standing part belayed to the bitts; thus a direct runner purchase instead of a dead nip was obtained. It was only used when other means failed, and, after the introduction of Phillipps' patent capstan, was disused. VIOLENCE. The question in tort, as to the amount of liability incurred by the owners for outrages and irregularities committed by the master. VIRE. The arrow shot from a cross-bow; also called a quarril. VIRGILIÆ. A denomination of the Pleiades. VIRGO. The sixth sign of the zodiac, which the sun enters about the 21st August. Spica, a Virginis, is a star of the first magnitude. VIS INSITA. The innate force of matter; another name for vis inertiÆ. It is that by which a vessel "keeps her way." VISNE. A neighbouring place; a term often used in law in actions of marine replevin. VIS VIVA. The whole effective force or power of acting which resides in a given moving body. VITRY. A light and durable canvas. VITTORY. A fine canvas, of which the waist-cloths were formerly made. VIVANDIERE. A kind of female sutler. In the French army they are attached to regiments, which they accompany, sometimes even into the skirts of action. VIVIER. A French fishing-boat, the same as the well-boats of the English coasts, in having a well amidships in which to keep the fish alive until arrival in port. VIZY, or Vize. An old name for the muzzle-sight on a musket. VOCABULARY. The system of naval signals based on Sir Home Popham's improvements. VOES. Arms or inlets of the sea, or sounds, in the Shetland and Orkney Isles. Also applied to creeks and bays. VOGOVANS. From voguer and avant, chief rowers in the galleys. VOLANT. A piece of steel on a helmet, presenting an acute angle to the front. VOLCANO. A burning mountain or vent for subterranean fire; also applied to one which vomits only mud and water. VOLLEY. The simultaneous discharge of a number of fire-arms. VOLLIGUE. A small boat used on the shores of Asia Minor. VOLUME. The contents of the globe of a planet, usually given in its proportion to that of the earth; or any named mass, solid, fluid, or vaporous. VOLUNTARY CHARGE. A document delivered with the purser's accounts respecting provisions. VOLUNTEER. One who freely offers himself for a particular service. Formerly, in the army, a gentleman who, without any certain post or employment, served in the hope of earning preferment, or from patriotism. Latterly, also a civilian who has enrolled himself in a corps of volunteers, for organization and training for the defence of the country. VOLUNTEERING from a Merchantman into the Navy. Any seaman can leave his ship for the purpose of forthwith entering into the royal navy; and thus leaving his ship does not render him liable to any forfeiture whatever. VOLUTE. See Scroll-head. VOLVELLE. The contrivance of revolving graduated circles, for making calculations, in old scientific works. VORTEX. A whirlwind, or sudden, rapid, or violent motion of air or water in gyres or circles. VOUCHER. A written document or proof, upon which any account or public charge is established. VOYOL. See Viol. VRACH. Sea-weed used as a manure in the Channel Islands. Also, a Manx term for the mackerel. VULFE. A rapid whirlpool or race on the coast of Norway. |