Fantastic collection of gyroscopes and thanks for showing them! My gyroscope is a very incomplete relic compared to yours but now I have a better idea what it would have looked like. Norway bought, together with Sweden, their first Whitehead torpedoes in 1875 (delivered in 1876). The German heavy cruiser "Blücher" was hit and sunk (the ship was also hit by two 28 cm shells) by two Whitehead Mk V torpedoes in April 1940, so I guess several models of the Whitehead torpedo was in use in Norway during the period 1876-1940.
Talking about torpedoes and relics, take a look at the attached pictures. I think this is a German torpedo director used on larger surface ships, more precisely a
“Brücke Nacht Ziel Apparat” (BNZA). I am however not sure! Any information would be much appreciated!
The “base”, which is heavily damaged, has a diameter of 26 cm and weighs almost 16 kilo. From what I can see, the material is a combination of brass/bronze and steel and it is marked with “Carl Zeiss, Jena, Nr. 1” and the Reichsmarine symbol (M over an anchor). This relic comes from the German light cruiser “Königsberg” and was found by divers after the war.
“Königsberg” took part in Operation Weserübung, the invasion of Norway in April 1940. While attacking Bergen, she was damaged by Norwegian coastal artillery, and sunk by British bombers the following day in the harbour of Bergen.




