NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: Snellius Construction questions
From: Nicol�s de Hilster
Date: 2009 Jan 15, 09:04 +0100
From: Nicol�s de Hilster
Date: 2009 Jan 15, 09:04 +0100
Richard M. Pisko wrote: > On Thu, 08 Jan 2009 14:03:52 -0700, Nicol�s de Hilster >wrote: > > >> Later on I have been on projects where either station >> pointers or 'circle charts' were used to solve the position. A circle >> chart looks similar to a Decca chart, but now covered with circles that >> resemble the angles measured. >> > > Are "circle charts" clear overlays for the coastal charts? Do you center > one on each reference landmark, and find the proper intersecting angle > lines by eye? > > I have a couple of vague ideas of how that may work, but I could be off on > the wrong track altogether. > These circle charts were made on the job by the surveyor and showed only what the navigator needed, in most cases that were a few known points, a bit of coast line, an outline of the working area and of course the circles. The charts were used for small area's of only a few kilometres in diameter and usually made of paper (A1 or A0 size). The jobs where they were used for were dredging and land reclamation jobs. The charts were used to position the cutter suction dredges, which are almost stationary vessels that move around using several anchors at long steel cables, so hardly any speed involved. I just checked when I have last seen these charts, which was only fifteen years ago in Nigeria (1994). > For a different approach, cheap station pointers might be made of three > clear plastic disks, joined by a hollow rivet at the center, and graduated > on the outer periphery in degrees. Each disk would have one axial line > pointing to its zero degree mark. > > However, I much prefer the workmanship in your real station pointers / > three arm protractors. Thanks for posting photographs of them. > > You're welcome. Some more can be found (used, for sale) here: http://www.santik.eu/instrument_ruler_pointer_en.htm As you can see on my web site one firm still produces plastic and metal station pointers: Warren-Knight Instrument Company, see http://www.warrenind.com/WKNavigation.html#Three Arm Protractors Nicol�s --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ Navigation List archive: www.fer3.com/arc To post, email NavList@fer3.com To , email NavList-@fer3.com -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---