k5083 wrote:
Optics. The predecessors of companies later known as Nikon, Minolta, Olympus and Pentax existed prior to World War II, and during the war produced military optics of the highest quality, including binoculars, camera optics, and sights for various weapons. This gear contributed to unexpected Japanese accuracy in naval artillery and aerial bombing. I have read, though not from very authoritative sources, that the larger American binoculars during the war were copied directly from captured Japanese ones. Beyond doubt, the development of optical technology in Japan before and during the war helped set the stage for the Japanese takeover of dominance in worldwide consumer optics (e.g. cameras) from the Germans and Americans in the 1960s.
Why do I feel there's a dreadful joke somewhere here about how the pre-war view of the Japanese all needing glasses comes back to bite the west with the quality of the Japanese optician's work?
More seriously, does anyone have anything useful - primary source, data analysis level - on Japanese bombsights?
Regards,