Sandrena
Well-Known Member
What does a transit produce?... a sight just produces a position line - like almost any other technique in navigation, except a transit.
What does a transit produce?... a sight just produces a position line - like almost any other technique in navigation, except a transit.
So I would assume, but having never been on the RYA course, I wouldn't know. I was using it at sea long before the RYA course (or GPS) came on the scene. And there did seem to be some confusion amongst some posters here about the fact that a sight just produces a position line - like almost any other technique in navigation, except a transit.
(Indeed, your own question to Sealeopard tended to suggest a slightly shaky understanding!)
Is a transit not a position line?..... the fact that a sight just produces a position line - like almost any other technique in navigation, except a transit.
(Indeed, your own question to Sealeopard tended to suggest a slightly shaky understanding!)
a sight just produces a position line - like almost any other technique in navigation, except a transit.
According to the RYA Navigation handbook:... It's only in the world of RYA examples that two position lines have to be from the same type of source..
Although really both those fixes are produced from the intersection of two lines; the compass bearing, and the circle of distance off.A transit is of course just another position line!
There are a few techniques that produce a fix from a single object for example using the known height of a lighthouse. The one taught on nav courses gets distance off by vertical sextant angle. One I have used quite a few times at night is a dipping light. Not terribly precise but as it usually involves being many miles offshore, not too much of a problem.
Thank you for the link, I will have a look at that!If you want the absolute easiest, simplest and quickest guide to celestial navigation go to http://backbearing.com/ and download the Sextant Users Guide by Andrew Evans, mentioned in the 6th paragraph. It gives a complete yet simple description of all the stupid navigation terms that will confuse you (like "same name" and "assumed position") It also has the form you need to fill out and the plotting page that you can print off many copies. All of the other links you need are also on that page. I guarantee that you will completely understand using your sextant AND know how to find yourself within 2 hours - and its free!
My question was simply to confirm method.
It's only in the world of RYA examples that two position lines have to be from the same type of source.
There are a few techniques that produce a fix from a single object for example using the known height of a lighthouse. The one taught on nav courses gets distance off by vertical sextant angle. One I have used quite a few times at night is a dipping light.
Mikebryan: This is taken from my Sextant Users Guide, mentioned a few posts earlier: LHA, or Local Hour Angle, measures the angle of the sun West of your assumed position. LHA is always measured to your west, even if the sun is east of the AP. For example, if the sun is 10 deg west of your AP, then LHA is 10. But if the sun is 4 deg east of your AP, then the LHA is 356.
You calculate your LHA by subtracting your AP-Longitude from your GHA. Because your AP includes the minutes and tenths that are identical to the GHA, then the LHA is a nice even degrees only number, such as 356. Rather than 356 48.8'
I'm just assuming that you understand what "Assumed Position" is, but of course that might be a bad assumption.
Take a look at the Sextant Users Guide to understand all of this better. This is the exact reason why I wrote the darn thing, because I found the books to be totally incomprehensible!
Oh yeah, Mary Blewitt, um, great in her day, but, cmon, more fun drinking sheep dip.
Go modern, Tom Cunliffe is very good, Tim Bartlett better by a smidge. My bibles.