Beelzebub
Well-known member
I've still got my sextant
I've still got my sextant
Yes - its simple vector maths for the most partEasy question.
Me? Yes.
Not only do I remember Decca, I remember the old school version with special decca charts and a big box of tricks with four “deccometers” whose coordinates you then plotted on aforementioned Decca charts. It worked fine until it rained…..Or Decca?
And why people called it Desmond?
My dear departed father would have raised an eyebrow at Gee! ;-)Can you navigate without using GNSS?
Of course. That's what HMQueen paid me for. But whether I need a 'carpenter's pencil' or a draftsman's Scheaffer 0.4mm 'sharpie' for my DR depends on the audience... and the examiner!
Back in the day, I had a couple of Decca Navigator 'pressies' of 5" Portland Protractors with neat cutouts for DR , MPP and Assumed Position.... worth a handful of points in the Assessed Nav parts of NATO Bombing Competitions. I still have 'em somewhere.... just in case.
Oh, the learned arguments about the validity of a sound 2-LOP fix versus adding the third ropy line, and the invocation - always at dead of night somewhere between Start Point and Alderney - of the Reduction of Uncertainty by means of ropy statistical Bands of Error.....
I once tried to explain this esoteric side-branch of Pro Navigation to one James Stevens. As I recall, his eyes glazed over and he fell into something akin to a hypnotic trance!
Oh, and there's a genuine-beduine laminated RAF Coastal Command 'CONSOL' Chart up in the loft, which I used to good effect on several of my early RORC races. Yes, contrary to scurilous rumour I could count up to 60....
Gee, this is better than any old anchor wrangle!
Yes.
And I can make my own paper chart, if I need one, having watched HW Tilman calmly make a chart of the Irish Sea because we hadn’t been expecting to go that way.
I last saw a twiddle the dials Decca Navigator in the wheelhouse of the frigate HMS Sheffield in 1996. That was seven years after I had thrown them off the ships of the Swire Group and told everyone to nip down to the yacht chandlers and buy a Walker, thereby saving us US$ 87,000 a year in paper lattice charts.
But the Grey Funnel Line got their Decca charts free. Big difference.
Aye, laddie. That'll be a Mercator Projection, I imagine. But would you manage wi' some other popular projections...?
( I'm betting there's less than 1 in 100 who come on here who even know there ARE other projections, never mind what to do with them.... )
Well, I do - and routinely used several. Mercator isn't a lot of good in the polar regions. I still have reference material on my bookshelves - I implemented computer software for quite a few! Polar Stereographic was the routine one for me, with Lambert Conformal Conic as another regular one, with Lambert Equal Area for some purposes. My least favourite is Mercator, normal or transverse, mainly because the ellipsoidal equations are intractable; you have to use Taylor Series, with inevitable loss of precision. A really fun one was Space Oblique Mercator, but thankfully that was only in vogue in the early days of the Landsat satellites; it was basically a mathematical description of the imaging mechanism of early remote sensing satellites.Aye, laddie. That'll be a Mercator Projection, I imagine. But would you manage wi' some other popular projections...?
( I'm betting there's less than 1 in 100 who come on here who even know there ARE other projections, never mind what to do with them.... )
+1 with NASA GPS repeater in cockpit linked to the Yeoman. When route planned, if using out of date charts, I check the positions of buoys, shallow patches etc.on navionics on my phone and amend the charted positions on the outdated charts. Will continue to do this when paper charts are dispensed with! Yeoman is a great system, not in your face, not subject to screen invisibility in bright sunlight and route planning is on a decent sized surface, not peering into an ancient small TV like screen!Hmmm, still have and use the Yeoman, big picture on paper and x marks the spot if all dies.
BUT when paper dies will have only old uncorrected charts ? ?
Theres a plug in our saloon that belongs in the Yeoman, it is brought out whenever we are out of visual home territory. Just seems the right thing to do, keeping a paper record. We could fall back entirely to it if required, but I don’t do that for sh1ts snd giggles, 2 of us on board, the purpose of the plotter is to navigate from the cockpit.+1 with NASA GPS repeater in cockpit linked to the Yeoman. When route planned, if using out of date charts, I check the positions of buoys, shallow patches etc.on navionics on my phone and amend the charted positions on the outdated charts. Will continue to do this when paper charts are dispensed with! Yeoman is a great system, not in your face, not subject to screen invisibility in bright sunlight and route planning is on a decent sized surface, not peering into an ancient small TV like screen!
And a dollar alarm clock that you have boiled to make it run right.I have my school atlas
But you need lunar tables and a sextant to make that work!And a dollar alarm clock that you have boiled to make it run right.
Well, I do - and routinely used several. Mercator isn't a lot of good in the polar regions. I still have reference material on my bookshelves - I implemented computer software for quite a few! Polar Stereographic was the routine one for me, with Lambert Conformal Conic as another regular one, with Lambert Equal Area for some purposes. My least favourite is Mercator, normal or transverse, mainly because the ellipsoidal equations are intractable; you have to use Taylor Series, with inevitable loss of precision. A really fun one was Space Oblique Mercator, but thankfully that was only in vogue in the early days of the Landsat satellites; it was basically a mathematical description of the imaging mechanism of early remote sensing satellites.
I've been involved in ISO standards for coordinate systems, too.
I imagine that Tilman would have used Plat Carree; that's much the simplest to construct manually. Mercator is actually pretty difficult to do accurately.