NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: Great Circle Course via calculator & HO 208
From: Bill B
Date: 2016 Oct 4, 23:12 -0400
From: Bill B
Date: 2016 Oct 4, 23:12 -0400
On 10/4/2016 2:13 PM, David Fleming wrote: > Appologies to Gary and all Navlist members my previous reply was too > terse and further should have been directed to Bill B. > > Google Earth claims1 degree longitude at 41 N represents .76 degree arc. > This is correct. > > GE also says the arc is 45.46 nm long. therefore 45.46nm / 60 nm/degree > = .7576 degrees. > Perhaps semantics. To the best of my knowledge there are 360 degrees in a circle, 60 minutes per degree, and 60 seconds per minute. Short answer, 86 degrees - 85 degrees = 1 degree, period. I suspect you are comparing apples to oranges. Certainly the distance in miles, meters feet etc. between meridians diminishes as the position moves from the equator to the poles, but a circle created by a parallel is still a circle (albeit with a smaller radius) and degree remains a degree (as do arc minutes and arc seconds relationship to a degree). How then should I report my position on the 41st parallel half way between the 85th and 86th meridian? As 85d 22' 44" given your assertion that a degree is "45.46nm / 60 nm/degree = .7576 degrees" which equals 45'27". (45' 27"/2 = 22' 44"). I would prefer to report my longitude as 85d 30', especially if in need of rescue (perhaps lost in a sweetcorn maze?)! Less terse, but IMHO a superior answer if you want a chopper to show up with boiling water and butter :-)