AntarcticPilot
Well-Known Member
I certainly do not dispute that such charts do ignore the fact that meridians are not pararrel, but for those working in the majority of the oceans other that the very high latitudes those errors are to small to worry about in the scale that these plotting sheets are used. In the prehistoric days before GPS it was accepted that astro was imprecise and the objective was to keep ones errors below 5nm, quite satisfarorary in mid atlantic, one was advised never to aim directly for the destination landfall, but to one side or the other, by more than your expected error so you knew which way to turn. I sometimes think we crave too much accuracy at times these days, but then I am an old fart who survived walking to school by myself at the age of 5, drank unpurified water as a child etc etc.
High latitude navigation and in particular charts and their projections is a special case, one I never had to deal with and I must admit I have no intyentions of starting now. Thus if I do find myself having to do a bit of astro then those hand made plotting sheets will suffice.
Well, look at my username to understand why I worry about high latitudes
Just for completeness' sake, someone voyaging to Svalbard - not an impossible destination for a European yacht - would be well advised to take account of chart distortions caused by the high latitude.