Bi111ion
Well-Known Member
I wonder if every navigation class has at some point exited to the pub still debating if the probability of being in a cocked hat from a three line position fix is really 1/4 - surely it depends on the size of the hat!
The age old conundrum has been settled by Robin Stuart in the Journal of Navigation https://www.cambridge.org/core/jour...n-cocked-hat/E633B3F6347774A0E0E091FD51523959
In a nut shell, before you know where the lines are it is 1/4. Once you have drawn the lines it depends, and he works it out.
The admiralty manual of navigation from over 100 years ago suggest picking the point of the triangle closest to danger.
A better idea might be to consider the ellipse of uncertainty and pick the point of that closest to danger.
Anyway such debates abound on NavList, where we still discuss the best use of our sextants and chronometers, and maybe not practical enough for PBO forum!
The age old conundrum has been settled by Robin Stuart in the Journal of Navigation https://www.cambridge.org/core/jour...n-cocked-hat/E633B3F6347774A0E0E091FD51523959
In a nut shell, before you know where the lines are it is 1/4. Once you have drawn the lines it depends, and he works it out.
The admiralty manual of navigation from over 100 years ago suggest picking the point of the triangle closest to danger.
A better idea might be to consider the ellipse of uncertainty and pick the point of that closest to danger.
Anyway such debates abound on NavList, where we still discuss the best use of our sextants and chronometers, and maybe not practical enough for PBO forum!