Lakesailor
Well-Known Member
Good grief.
180 posts
Still no solution.
How do any of you decide which hand to wipe your arse with?
180 posts
Still no solution.
How do any of you decide which hand to wipe your arse with?
... Still no solution ..... How do any of you decide which hand to wipe your arse with?
Bingo. By George he's got it!For the method to work the distance has to be sufficiently large that the bearing can be considered to be be "constant" over the time being measured
Bingo. By George he's got it!
That is why I said the scale was (almost) irrelevant -- because the only bit of my diagram that might change is the distance to the landmark (buoy, on my diagram).
And it's why the method works for snap decisions taken at the last minute, such as between racing boats or in very confined waters such as the Solent. It's also why the method does not work for the more carefully considered decisions taken at longer range in more open water and in ship/yacht encounters.
Is it my imagination, or have we worked our way back round to where we were about 150 posts ago?
.... But I rather suspect that cetain minds a closed to new ideas partic when entrenched...
Not really. The "moving against the land" method relies on the fact that the land is not absolutely uniform, because if it were, you would have no way of knowing whether the other vessel had "moved" relative to it or not. In other words, your "land horizon" (??) is made up of lots of landmarks all joined together -- dips, hills, hollows, changes of colour and texture, trees, buildings and so on.Am I missing something here?
Tim is talking about a fixed MARK on the shore.
Jimi is talking about the LAND HORIZON.
These are totally different scenarios.
There are several answers to that.
Probably luck. It obviously has absolutely nothing to do with the way you assess risk of collision.Damn!
But why have I failed to hit anything in 40+ years?
Probably luck. It obviously has absolutely nothing to do with the way you assess risk of collision.
That approach will always work against a fixed object - as it ensures you're approaching on a straight course across the ground.Now, here's an interesting slant. You WANT to hit something - a mooring buoy say. There's a tide running. What do the YM text books say? Steer a course and speed which holds the buoy constant against the background and you will fetch it. If it moves against the background you'll miss it.
Pipe that in your smoke and stick it.
How long is a moment?T<snip> at the moment of observation