Stemar
Well-known member
... a cloudy bank holiday weekend, so you lot can't use your sextants eitherImagine the chaos if gps was jammed in the Solent on a bank holiday weekend. ??
... a cloudy bank holiday weekend, so you lot can't use your sextants eitherImagine the chaos if gps was jammed in the Solent on a bank holiday weekend. ??
Common place in the eastern med. We have GPS outage flying into Egypt all the time.Understand. Joint Warrior I think is the Excercise. But, there is always a but, that's a small area for a limited period. Personally I've never had a gps jammed anywhere across a number of seas and oceans.
If we are talking Astro we are talking about crossing Oceans and taking sights in the middle of the Atlantic.Get warnings frequently every year around the Minch during military exercises that there could be issues with GPS jamming - the boys in the grey ships are clearly playing GPS jamming tech regularly.
Agree. Plus echo sounder, hand bearing compass, tide tables. A brief run up of a tide curve is very useful. And computation of rates for tide streams is generally straightforward to interpolate with ones grey matter. Just takes practice!If we are talking Astro we are talking about crossing Oceans and taking sights in the middle of the Atlantic.
Hardly likely to be subject to GPS jamming there.
For those who don't know - Astro is not appropriate for coastal or pilotage situations. In those circumstances the fall back is a set of paper charts and the Mk 1 eyeball.
Wonder why? What do all the ships in and out of the Suez Canal do?Common place in the eastern med. We have GPS outage flying into Egypt all the time.
That you were aware of. The position can be changed as easily as jammed.Understand. Joint Warrior I think is the Excercise. But, there is always a but, that's a small area for a limited period. Personally I've never had a gps jammed anywhere across a number of seas and oceans.
Mebbe easy.....but where and when? I'm not seeing the worlds huge merchant fleets in disarray. Or myriads of small craft in dire circumstance. ?That you were aware of. The position can be changed as easily as jammed.
https://www.eurocontrol.int/sites/default/files/2021-03/eurocontrol-sf-gnss-iata.pdfWonder why? What do all the ships in and out of the Suez Canal do?
Indeed, and it even works as a handy pelorus for taking horizontal bearings.As an aid to position fixing for vertical sextant angles on objects, I have used a sextant often in the past. It’s a very quick and accurate way of position fixing when an object’s height is known and the distance off is marked on a single position line. In my case a low cost plastic sextant was adequate.
A really bad solar flare (see Carrington Event) would kill all forms of GNSS stone dead. It would probably disable a fair amount of the satellite constellation as well as the direct effects.Understand. Joint Warrior I think is the Excercise. But, there is always a but, that's a small area for a limited period. Personally I've never had a gps jammed anywhere across a number of seas and oceans.
I used to use an Astrofix calculator to do a running fix. That calculator was very easy to use and did cover all the main stars and planets. I presume there is a download of the program and files available these days.An app called "astro Calculator" on android - does the sums for you, shows you the working and plots your position. Really quite good
Indeed, and it even works as a handy pelorus for taking horizontal bearings.
Not really since solar noon drifts about quite a bit
So yeah, use calculators. But reductions using apps aren't gonna make people learn it properly, yeah that word again, until they've used tables and obtained a position after a couple of days using basic techniques.
This is the crux of the matter.I'm going to respectfully disagree with your criticism of lustyd's point here. If we rewound 40 years before most recreational yachts had GPS and sextant was the primary means of ocean navigation, As I Understand It (older folks who were there please chime in...) use of calculators for sight reductions was normal.
Now I do use tables because I learned the "RYA method" but surely if we're "cheating" with tables, we can't criticise those who "cheat" with calculators.
This is the crux of the matter.
The sole reason I learned astro was to navigate offshore if GPS was not available for any number of reasons. I do it to get a fix. Not to practice an ancient art.