Neil
Well-Known Member
At the risk of my exposure as a complete duffer, I'll pose this question to the cognoscenti. At the sight of a near full moon in a clear sky, I thought I'd dust off the sextant and re-familiarise myself with moon sights. Using an artificial horizon, I took the sight, noted the time and cooked dinner. Afterwards, I reduced the sight and came up with the wrong answer. I couldn't find my mistake, so thought to take another sight. The apparent altitude (at around 10.00 pm) was 58 degrees odd. I'd got to the moon correction tables only to find that for the first correction, the tables only went to 34 degrees of apparent altitude?
What am I missing here? or is it just too late at night? (for me, not the moon!)
I have to admit that the only couple of times I did reduce a moon sight, it was with Cunliffe's book constantly at hand - it's not something I've practiced a lot.
What am I missing here? or is it just too late at night? (for me, not the moon!)
I have to admit that the only couple of times I did reduce a moon sight, it was with Cunliffe's book constantly at hand - it's not something I've practiced a lot.