NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: Chasing Shackleton
From: Stan K
Date: 2014 Jan 16, 20:12 -0500
From: Stan K
Date: 2014 Jan 16, 20:12 -0500
Alan,
Chasing Shackleton was on at 10 PM, and I've heard things that surprised me on TV even earlier, and on non-pay channels.
The Davis sextants work surprisingly well. Just have to let them stabilize to the temperature and check index error before and after a run of sights (and correct accordingly). A lot of students, particularly women, like them because of their light weight, at least until the wind picks up. Yes, the scope leaves something to be desired.
I went to check on the cardboard sextant a while ago. The glue I used dried up and the thing had fallen apart. I put it back together, but with hot glue this time. Much better. The 7 nm sight I took with it was from the front deck of a 25-foot boat anchored at Duck Island in Long Island Sound. It is a very popular spot, with boats constantly going in and out of the anchorage, and boats moving fast not too far away. I was getting bounced around quite a bit, and I really think most of the error was due to that, not to the sextant itself.
Stan
Chasing Shackleton was on at 10 PM, and I've heard things that surprised me on TV even earlier, and on non-pay channels.
The Davis sextants work surprisingly well. Just have to let them stabilize to the temperature and check index error before and after a run of sights (and correct accordingly). A lot of students, particularly women, like them because of their light weight, at least until the wind picks up. Yes, the scope leaves something to be desired.
I went to check on the cardboard sextant a while ago. The glue I used dried up and the thing had fallen apart. I put it back together, but with hot glue this time. Much better. The 7 nm sight I took with it was from the front deck of a 25-foot boat anchored at Duck Island in Long Island Sound. It is a very popular spot, with boats constantly going in and out of the anchorage, and boats moving fast not too far away. I was getting bounced around quite a bit, and I really think most of the error was due to that, not to the sextant itself.
Stan
-----Original Message-----
From: Alan S <alan202@verizon.net>
To: slk1000 <slk1000@aol.com>
Sent: Thu, Jan 16, 2014 7:57 pm
Subject: [NavList] Re: Chasing Shackleton
From: Alan S <alan202@verizon.net>
To: slk1000 <slk1000@aol.com>
Sent: Thu, Jan 16, 2014 7:57 pm
Subject: [NavList] Re: Chasing Shackleton
Stan:
Re "prime time", this broadcast was NOT in that interval, or was it?
Re sextants,I have a Davis Mk. 15, that I purchased via Ebay, a number of years back. It works, though it does seem sensitive to grip pressure, and seems to feature wandering index error. It's optics are less than sterling, but useable , and if dropped over the side, I guess it would float too.
The fix you got with that cardboard kit sounds quite good, considering conditions an equipment.
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