NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
From: David Pike
Date: 2015 Feb 10, 16:37 -0800
David Pike, you wondered:
"What did you mean the sun is so low it makes the use of an artificial horizon impractical?"I believe he said that the Sun is so far south that it makes the use of an artificial horizon impractical. But you see... he is in the southern hemisphere, so a far southerly declination for the Sun actually implies that the Sun is too high for an artificial horizon. Assuming a sextant has a maximum practical angular measurement of 120° (some manage a bit more but we'll ignore that), that implies a maximum altitude of 60°. How did 19th century explorers/surveyors in Africa and Australia, for example, measure latitudes on land with a sextant when the Sun at noon was higher than 60 degrees?
Oops! Silly me. I thought it didn’t sound quite correct, but I’m afraid I let the sciatica still present from sitting on the wet snow over Christmas overrule my brain. However, many sheets of sketch pad later, all might not be lost. I think it’s now been shown that there are many better methods than the use of a nautical sextant for land navigation, but what if you only had a mirror artificial horizon and a sextant which measured up to a Hs of 60°, and you wanted to measure a Hs of 65°? Last month, I managed to prove to myself that the error caused by a tilted artificial horizon mirror was equal to the angle of tilt https://NavList.net/m2.aspx/Tilt-Errors-Artificial-Horizons-DavidPike-jan-2015-g29955 . Why not use this to advantage. If you modified your AH to be able to tilt to a measurable angle, you could increase the values of Hs you could measure. E.g. in the photo below, Hs = 65°, the mirror is horizontal, so the angle to be measure = 130°. This is outside limits. If the mirror is tilted 10° towards the observer, the angle to be measured = 110°. This is inside limits. Hs = 110°/2 + 10° tilt error. I.e. Hs is still 65° but measurable. And I was going to go to bed early tonight. Dave