NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
From: David Pike
Date: 2019 Nov 10, 15:47 -0800
Brad Morris You wrote: How in the world do you take a noon observation for latitude?
Brad
I thought the telescope was for stars; isn’t that why it’s called a star telescope. Don’t high power magnifying glasses burn better holes faster? I tend to favour my right eye with sextants, because it fits better, but I also know that my right eye is worse than my left, so I try to protect both as much as possible. Just thinking about it seems to have made this writing go slopey. I normally just use the sighting tube plus a rubber flange for the Sun (and lots of filter of course). With a Smiths Mk2, you’re stuck with 2x, but there’s a great big periscopic sextant in front of your face, a really good filter system, and a big floppy eyepiece, so no light gets round the sides. DaveP