Spirit (of Glenans)
Well-Known Member
To drag you all back, however unwillingly, to the OP's actual question:First mate is about to do her DS theory. Her instructor has told her that any innaccuracy in plotting a fix will lead to fail. in revising ahead of tomorrow's exam, she has just obtained a 100 yard "cocked hat" and is now convinced she will fail.
I am trying to say that a 100 yard margin of error (from an object 3.5m away) is acceptable. It's a fraction of a degree, the thickness of the lines on the plotter. A big cocked hat is a prompt that you made a significant plotting error, then you check again.
More importantly in real world, if visibility is such that you can see 3.5 miles, 100 yards in open water (which you've covered several times over in the time taken between fixes) is simply neither here nor there. If you are within 100 yards of an unmarked hazard and you don't know it's there or which way lies safe water, a far-off fix isn't much good to you.
Am I right? Or is the instructor right to indicate that all 3 lines must actually cross? Trying to help 1st mate through something she is finding quite tough.
There is a difference between what happens in the real world, (or a Practical Assessment for DS), and what happens in answering a question on a DS Theory paper. In the former case, a properly executed Three-Point Fix will give an approximation of the position of the boat to within perhaps 100 yds, or so, which was perfectly acceptable and workable in the days before GPS became widely available.
In the latter case the bearings of the Charted Objects are GIVEN in degrees M, along with figures for the Variation and Deviation. If the correct mathematical workings are applied, a very precise and predictable result in degrees True is produced, which results in a "Cocked Hat" of a particular size and shape. This is what the Assessor will be looking for. Whether or not the boat is inside or outside the triangle is absolutely irrelevant in this discussion.
To further bolster this point, in the real world, the Rule of Twelfths is enough for Tidal Calculations whereas a Theory assessor will be requiring an answer correct to two decimal places.