NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: Practice Bubble Horizon
From: Bill B
Date: 2014 Mar 02, 14:30 -0500
From: Bill B
Date: 2014 Mar 02, 14:30 -0500
On 2/28/2014 6:26 PM, Alan S wrote: > Re the Practice BH, while I suppose they work, in daylight anyhow,it > takes a steadier hand than I have. Also,as I mentioned, I never could > understand the BC Factor, perhaps I'm dense. First a correction. Brackets on the reticle would not help much with the bubble as the reticle lines do not show up on the bubble. The limit lines would have to be on the spirit level, or perhaps the mirror that reflects the level. Regarding the bubble error/correction or SIC (Sextant Index Correction as Celestaire calls it): As an analogy, imagine you purchased a 4 ft plastic carpenter's level at you local big-box store. You bring it home, use a magnifying glass to center the spirit level and some ingenuity to secure the level int that position. Then you check level with a section of water-filled clear tubing. You find it is a 1/16" off of perpendicular (no island gravity mound). You can compensate for that in use, or figure, "What the heck, it's a carpenter's level so 4.5 minutes of an arc doesn't really mater when you have seen 8' walls 1" out of plumb. Clearly that would be too much error for a sextant. To obtain bubble error I first doubled checked IE using tangent images of the sun's limbs. Then I did a LAN observation with an AH to use as a sanity check/baseline. I also establish a true south a range. For several days following that I tripod mounted the sextant using photographic grip hardware and pointed the scope true south. Then I did my best to center the bubble, lock it down, and do LAN observations (time and Ho precalculated). (I found it easier and more repeatable for me to bisect the sun with the reticle line rather than bringing a limb tangent to the line, but that's a personal preference.) Once you reduce the bubble LAN observations (no dip correction) and compare the Ho to Hc, you obtain an error that includes any index error. Back out the IE and you have your bubble error. That's my story and I'm sticking to it ;-) Note: I did several observations and averaged them as precisely centering the bubble from day to day was not a given for this operator, even with a tripod. In some situations lighting may cause the bubble to have a highlight on one long edge and a shadow on the other producing fluting. This optical illusion further complicates matters. I will follow up with questions I have regarding determining this units bubble error with a natural horizon. Hope that helps