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    Re: Mk IX First Results
    From: Jean-Philippe Planas
    Date: 2023 Nov 24, 15:03 +0000
    Hi,

    These results seem rather acceptable to me. Those airplane sextants were not designed to give a better precision than between a couple nautical miles to five nautical miles away from the real position. In the air, it was useless to have a better precision and also hopeless due to turbulences, wake, vibrations, coriolis, accelerations, you name it...
    When I still had good eyes I did a lot of experiments and the precision ranged from 0.5 to 8 NM depending on the conditions and body (mostly the sun).
    For all my MkIX the bubbles are very lively but for one which is a bit sluggish for a reason I can't make out.
    Thanks to keep us posted and continue to have fun.

    JPP

    On Friday, November 24, 2023 at 03:38:04 PM GMT+1, NavList Community <navlist@fer3.com> wrote:


    Yesterday was first evening with somewhat clear skies here and Jupiter was in the east, and even the Moon was there, so I got a few runs of the newly refurbished Mk IX. As mentioned in the manual the averager takes forever, those 2 minutes are really long, but in the end it was worth waiting for the result. I found the bubble a little sluggish and I need more training in centering it. A little aiming circle instead of the thin vertical lines would be helpful. Also my old eyes would need a bit more illumination of the bubble to be able to center it better.

    I made shots with and without the averager and took readings both from the averager and the scales on the side. This way I got two altitudes from one sighting. The averager reading belongs to a time 57 seconds before shutter closing, while the side readings are from "shutter close".

    I shan't bother you with all the numbers, only some results.

    The Moon with averager was +0.4 and –0.8 nm. Without averager the errors varied quite a bit more with a median of –2.5 nm from 5 readings.

    Juipter with averager was –5.1, –0.1 and –1.0 nm. Without averager the errors were all over the place ranging from outliers at –17, –12.0 and –11.8 nm giving  a median from 7 shots of –5 nm (outliers included) or –1.1 nm (outliers excluded).

    Now in the morning Venus was there and with averager had an error of +1 nm (two shots).

    In all, the sextant does a fine job and I need more experience with it. This is fun!


       
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