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Default Binoculars with compass

On Mar 14, 4:48 pm, Bruce in Bangkok wrote:
Well, normally when you are doing it you take the angle between two
points a known distance apart...


That still gives you an arc of position, not a fix.

-- Tom.
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Default Binoculars with compass

Bruce in Bangkok wrote:
On Fri, 14 Mar 2008 11:16:58 -0700 (PDT), "
wrote:
I don't know how the OP intends to use the compass but 7 degrees is a
lot of error. More than twice what I'd expect from a well corrected
compass. Keep in mind, with deviation, the error will be between
headings so the angle between your two objects could be 7 degrees off
in this case... Good thing he's got a GPS.


I had assumed that he was using the glasses to measure the angle
between two known objects as is normal with a hand bearing compass. In
which case whether or not the glasses were reading the correct
magnetic heading is irrelevant.


This is only true if the error is constant. For example, you don't have
to be concerned with variation if you're only considering the angle
between two objects. However, if, as is apparently the OP's case, the
compass has deviation that changes with heading, then the computed angle
will be faulty. The reported data implies that the angle could be off
by more than 8 degrees, which makes it hardly worth plotting.

Traditionally, a horizontal sextant sight is taken. This can give a
high degree of accuracy. Until recently, such sights were the primary
technique for positioning buoys.
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Default Binoculars with compass

On Mar 15, 3:52 am, jeff wrote:
... between two objects. ...
Traditionally, a horizontal sextant sight is taken. This can give a
high degree of accuracy. Until recently, such sights were the primary
technique for positioning buoys.


That's not less than three, (3), (...---), (2+1), etc. objects for
horizontal angles not in transit to get a fix. That's why they
have three armed protractors.

-- Tom.

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Default Binoculars with compass

On Sat, 15 Mar 2008 09:41:57 +0700, Bruce in Bangkok
wrote:

I had assumed that he was using the glasses to measure the angle
between two known objects as is normal with a hand bearing compass. In
which case whether or not the glasses were reading the correct
magnetic heading is irrelevant.

\
GPS is here to stay, but the sextant has other uses. Measuring the
vertical angle subtended by something, a lighthouse perhaps, of known
size, will give the range.

Casady
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