BelleSerene
Well-Known Member
Surely it would be simple, we would just flip all the bearings by 180 degrees? :encouragement:
Can you explain how you arrived at that gloriously precise answer?
Surely it would be simple, we would just flip all the bearings by 180 degrees? :encouragement:
Correct me if I'm wrong ( probably am ) but a 50 km discrepancy if you were up in the arctic or even Norway could be quite a big error?
Can you explain how you arrived at that gloriously precise answer?
Incredible, no mention of global warming.![]()
50km is 50km wherever you are, surely.
Richard
Very interesting, thanks for posting that.
I'm presuming that this would make the variation figures on existing charts incorrect?
The figures on charts say something like"variation 5°W reducing by x minutes per year.
Such predictions on older maps and charts will be way off. The speed of movement of the N magnetic pole was quite small (on average around 10km p.a.) for most of the 20th century. It speeded up considerably in the 1990s, and for the past 20 years has been around 50km per year (part of the point of the article, which isn't exactly news).
Having not sailed in the SE of England for many years, I was quite startled to notice a year or two ago that True and Mag N were identical just off Deal. That point (although actually a line, of course) seems now to be somewhere around Junction 5 on the M2. Never expected to witness that when I was getting my first OS maps soggy in the Peak District all those years ago...
I haven't sailed around that corner recently but from memory I would say that the depth of water at junction 5 is insufficient for most cruising boats.
How long does a flip take? Do the poles move steadily and stay at the same longitude(s) during the flip?
I will accept "Nobody knows" as an answer.
Derek
How long does a flip take? Do the poles move steadily and stay at the same longitude(s) during the flip?
I will accept "Nobody knows" as an answer.
Derek
Good question! Unfortunately, the last time it happened was when our ancestors were learning to bang rocks together, so the answer is "we don't know". There isn't a good, finely datable sequence through a change, so we don't know how long it takes - rapidly by geological standards, but that's between 100 and 1000 years. We know that the field doesn't collapse to nothing( the effects of solar radiation would be obvious) and we know that it doesn't affect life on earth (it doesn't correlate with extinctions). But most geologists would quite like one to happen so we can observe it! The next one is a bit overdue..
Lucky we've got GPS now. A pity for the diehard traditionalist navigators.The next one is a bit overdue..
Lucky we've got GPS now. A pity for the diehard traditionalist navigators.
Derek
Errr not really... what will you steer to ?
GPS does show direction, too.
true, but it does wobble about a lot, especially in rolling seas