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    Re: sextant calibration
    From: George Huxtable
    Date: 2006 May 15, 07:05 +0100

    contact George Huxtable at george@huxtable.u-net.com
    or at +44 1865 820222 (from UK, 01865 820222)
    or at 1 Sandy Lane, Southmoor, Abingdon, Oxon OX13 5HX, UK.
    ----- Original Message -----
    From: "Red" 
    To: 
    Sent: Sunday, May 14, 2006 7:19 PM
    Subject: Re: [NAV-L] sextant calibration
    
    
    | George, failing to use a zero-adjustment, after obtaining a sextant
    that was
    | designed and built and sold at extra cost in order to enable you to
    make that
    | adjustment, is certainly possible. You are right. And building one,
    at
    | unnecessary expense which places your product at a marketing
    disadvantage, does
    | not mean the user MUST use it. You're right again.
    |
    | But failing to use the device, which can and often will eliminate
    one potential
    | source of math error from your reductions, makes absolutely no sense
    at all. It
    | would be what I call "belligerent ignorance", taking pride in NOT
    obtaining or
    | using the information and resources that in this case are literally
    at your
    | fingertips.
    |
    | While you've got a sextant in your hands for the first time, and
    presumably you
    | are taking the time to check it for errors and adjust them out, you
    would have
    | to be a particularly stubborn old coot to refuse to use one of the
    simplest and
    | most obvious tools on it to remove one step from all subsequent
    observations.
    |
    | I expect those people wouldn't bother using a sextant at all, when
    they can
    | simply look at their own feet and announce just as confidently "I am
    HERE!"
    |
    | ----- Original Message -----
    | From: "George Huxtable" 
    | To: 
    | Sent: Sunday, May 14, 2006 1:34 PM
    | Subject: Re: sextant calibration
    |
    |
    | > Red appeared to argue with my earlier statement-
    | >
    | > | "But one adjustment that does NOT  EVER
    | > | need to be made is the zeroing of index error, whatever it may
    be."
    | >
    | > in writing
    | >
    | > | The Plath companies apparently disagree with you, George. Their
    | > sextants are
    | > | built with an extra wheel and scale to allow the user to zero
    out
    | > the index
    | > | error. Would I do this every time? No, certainly not. But it is
    | > something that a
    | > | user certainly would do the first time they got the sextant, and
    | > were trying to
    | > | set up a baseline of adjustments on it, including the mirror
    | > positions.
    | > |
    | > | More like, to quote Gilbert & Sullivan's Mikado, "Never? Well,
    | > hardly ever!" 
    | >
    | > What I said was that the index error adjustment, to bring it to
    zero,
    | > does not ever need to be made, and that's a correct statement. The
    | > fact that Plath have arranged things so that if you want to adjust
    it,
    | > it's easy to do so, does not invalidate what I said. That's not
    the
    | > only instrument for which such provision has been made. I remember
    | > seeing an ebony octant, from the early 1800s, provided with a
    | > lever-on-lever mechanism for fine-tweaking the angle of the
    horizon
    | > mirror, for just that purpose. It provided just the right
    sensitivity
    | > of adjustment, and stayed nicely put when you let it be.
    | >
    | > But just because you CAN make such an adjustment doesn't mean you
    NEED
    | > TO. When Red says it's something "a user would certainly do the
    first
    | > time", I wonder where he gets that certainty from.
    | >
    | > George.
    | >
    | > contact George Huxtable at george@huxtable.u-net.com
    | > or at +44 1865 820222 (from UK, 01865 820222)
    | > or at 1 Sandy Lane, Southmoor, Abingdon, Oxon OX13 5HX, UK.
    | >
    |
    
    
    

       
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