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On Mon, 20 Aug 2007 09:40:34 -0400, Wayne.B
wrote: On Mon, 20 Aug 2007 22:02:33 +1000, Herodotus wrote: I have looked at these links and have spent the last few hours wandering about the web. What I cannot find out is whether I can receive these photos south of the equator. Seems like a great system at a reasonable cost. Can you advise please. That's really a two part question. I'm reasonably certain that you could receive the pictures but I don't know if the satellites are set up to capture southern hemisphere images. Is it worth noting that CRTs need to be aligned properly, according to the local version of the earths magnetic field?It is different according to the latitude, especially which hemisphere you are in. Flat screens don't care. Casady |
#2
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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* Richard Casady wrote, On 8/20/2007 10:57 AM:
On Mon, 20 Aug 2007 09:40:34 -0400, Wayne.B wrote: On Mon, 20 Aug 2007 22:02:33 +1000, Herodotus wrote: I have looked at these links and have spent the last few hours wandering about the web. What I cannot find out is whether I can receive these photos south of the equator. Seems like a great system at a reasonable cost. Can you advise please. That's really a two part question. I'm reasonably certain that you could receive the pictures but I don't know if the satellites are set up to capture southern hemisphere images. Is it worth noting that CRTs need to be aligned properly, according to the local version of the earths magnetic field?It is different according to the latitude, especially which hemisphere you are in. Flat screens don't care. You just turn the tube up-side-down for the Southern hemisphere. Really. When I worked on an orbiting telescope we discovered that the star trackers had insufficient magnetic shielding. I had to create an ephemeris database for the magnetic field in orbit, and apply the corrections to the nav solution. I doubt there are many using CRTs for computers on boats. A bigger issue is compass corrections. |
#3
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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On Mon, 20 Aug 2007 11:54:37 -0400, Jeff wrote:
I doubt there are many using CRTs for computers on boats. A bigger issue is compass corrections. You want the radar close to the compass so you can see both easily, unfortunately. The compass is an issue. Perhaps not for computers, but there are both radar and sonar in use, many with a CRT all you could get,and on some very small boats. Many prefered CRT for the good visibility in direct sunlight. I do believe that CRT are brighter. I know they used to be, by a non trivial ammount. Might e-mail a merchant marine officer school and see what the big boys use. Furano radar a good brand, and is popular for both boats and big ships. Someone sells a radar that works with a PC for a display. All the radar electronics are up by the antenna. Radar can be had for less than two grand, and so I plan to put it on my 22 foot runabout. The depth finder is nearly useless, except for spotting fish, the entire lake is the same depth. Maybe that is one reason so many of them are simply called 'fishfinders.' They make remote mounted compasses that have no moving parts except the indicater needle. Had one like that on a 1944 built biplane. You can make a six foot [folding?] mast for it if you have to. The compass is always the important issue. It and the clock are the most important instruments on any boat. People even set their clocks with short wave radio signals. I suppose you could check a compass with a GPS. Casady |
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