My problem was that the speakers were moveable, as were the bracket mounted
speakers referenced in the first post. If the orientation or location of a
permament magnet speaker can be easily changed, What's the navigator to do?
"derbyrm" wrote in message
news:rQUSf.829891$x96.477169@attbi_s72...
Swinging the vehicle to check the compass is a basic navigator duty. For
aircraft there's a compass rose on the tarmac, for boats/ships there are
hand bearing compasses and pelorus (pelori??), but see
http://www.boatsafe.com/nauticalknowhow/bearing.htm Check with all
equipment on board and energized and the engine running (if applicable).
A
deviation card should be mounted on the compass, or close by. Speaker
magnets are just one of many sources of deviation.
Then again, there are really cheap hiking-type GPS units that will tell
you
your track (but not your heading).
Roger
http://home.insightbb.com/~derbyrm
"Jim Conlin" wrote in message
. ..
I missed that day in fre\shman physics, so i remain not informed but
concerned.
A long time ago, i almost had a very nasty grounding because some
speakers
which had been brought on board deranged the compass.
"Maynard G. Krebbs" wrote in message
...
On Fri, 17 Mar 2006 14:44:53 GMT, chuck wrote:
Marine-type speakers are generally shielded (as are speakers intended
for use near CRTs) so this should not be a problem. The speaker
description/packaging should indicate whether it is magnetically
shielded.
I'd be interested in hearing of any cases where a magnetically
shielded
speaker has interfered with magnetic compass readings.
Chuck
Something I always wondered about is, "How do you magnetically shield
something."
Doesn't Magnetism pretty much go through things. How could you shield
a speaker's magnet so it wouldn't affect a compass?
Mark E. Williams