NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: Watch into Compass?
From: Dave Weilacher
Date: 2004 Feb 11, 16:24 -0500
From: Dave Weilacher
Date: 2004 Feb 11, 16:24 -0500
I had actually thought the boy scout method was a reasonable way of determining south as opposed to 180 degrees true. Accuracy to the umpth degree is pretty nearly useless when you hiking about in the woods. -----Original Message----- From: "Noyce, Bill"Sent: Feb 11, 2004 3:31 PM To: NAVIGATION-L@LISTSERV.WEBKAHUNA.COM Subject: Re: Watch into Compass? > Here's a puzzle: can you modify the Boy Scout watch method so that it > does not confuse azimuth with local hour angle and thus becomes a > somewhat more accurate compass? How about this procedure: Point the hour hand directly at the Sun (in general this requires tilting the watch into the sky). Rotate the watch around its hour hand (which remains pointing at the Sun) until 12:00 is also pointing into the sky at the same altitude (but generally in quite a different direction). Now the face of the watch points north (in most of the northern hemisphere). If the watch reads local apparent time and the sun is over the equator, the only errors are caused by imprecision of pointing, though they may be greatly magnified by the geometry. Corrections for daylight savings, longitude within zone, and equation of time are obvious, though perhaps only the first is worthwhile. It's not clear what, if anything, needs to be done about declination. Is this the kind of procedure Frank is envisioning? Has he tried it? -- Bill Dave Weilacher .US Coast Guard licensed captain . #889968 .ASA instructor evaluator and celestial . navigation instructor #990800 .IBM AS400 RPG contract programmer