NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: Bygrave slide rule
From: Bruce Hamilton
Date: 2008 Sep 27, 19:30 -0700
From: Bruce Hamilton
Date: 2008 Sep 27, 19:30 -0700
Thank you for the post on the Bygrave Slide Rule. It is a particular favorite of mine. I actually used slide rules in hight school, and learning to use them was still taught as a part of math. I certainly learned how to estimate accurately! We were the last class to do so. I hope to put together a Bygrave as a winter project once the winter rains come and the sky turns grey for the next several months. Speaking of slide rules. (I love asking odd questions on this list as there are many minds whose mix of applied math and practical thinking can actually answer the questions that would keep me up all night.) Where else would I be able to confirm that celestial navigation on Mars would be not much different than here. Anyway, I was looking at almanac tables and wondering if, because of the regularity of the change, if they could be put on something like a bygrave slide rule, where you set the date and read off the GHA and the Dec. I was thinking Bygrave as the scales are long enough to be very accurate. It would still be much bigger than 50 year tables that Geoffrey came up with. They saved my night the other night as I was sitting on a bench on the seawall here in Vancouver, practicing with my A12 when my Palm pilot died. The sudden lack of electronic almanac did not dampen the night's events as I then whipped out the 50 year almanac and read and penciled my way through the sites. It is much lighter than my Norie's that tends to become my desk. On the other end of the spectrum, I love the IKamal concept. Heck I would be happy with a sextant with optical rotary encoders linked to a BIG display. Watching me swap glasses and drag out a magnifier in order to read the vernier on my A-12 would make a good comedy skit. I had a quick look at off the shelf digital levels, but was unable to find anything with an accuracy of greater than 0.1 degrees. I looked at some expensive tilt indicators and they were not much better. I have read about modern self leveling theodolites, and suspect that they might have the needed technology, but have yet to find what mechanism they use to self level. A separate digital camera looking at a horizon bubble could certainly work. I imagine that a good digital camera linked to appropriate software will be the ultimate high tech "sextant", but I still like the idea of having something that works like a traditional sextant but is very high tech. Cheers Bruce Hamilton Vancouver, BC VE7 BRH --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ Navigation List archive: www.fer3.com/arc To post, email NavList@fer3.com To , email NavList-@fer3.com -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---