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On Mar 13, 5:39 pm, Bruce in Bangkok wrote:
... Perhaps you need to go to:http://www.steiner-binoculars.com/bi...arine/395.html and read up on these glasses. They have a world wide chart showing deviation in various areas. The maximum I noticed was 12.0 degrees. The chart seems to indicate that the compass is "balanced" for the specific area where the glasses are sold. Good link. I don't believe that they are really talking about deviation errors -- it's been a long hot day and beer has happened so I could be wrong... I think they are talking just about tilt. However, if that's true then the design is disappointing. It isn't hard to make compasses that are much, much less affected by tilt. I've got a couple of Plastimo Iris 50's that are Australian and I've used them all over the Pacific with no serious problems. Tilt is generally less than 10 degrees anywhere where the water is likely to be liquid so, any sail boat compass will need to be designed to work at angles much greater than those induced by magnetic tilt. I've even seen flat compasses with an extra movement that lets the compass magnet align itself with the Earths field in 3D. If the problem really is tilt, and it is easy to tell by tilting the glasses up and down, then the design is seriously flawed. -- Tom. |
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