rotrax
Well-Known Member
I don't think it would smell better, it's rendered animal fat.
IIRC Tallow was usually-but not always-mutton fat.
A bit pongy when ripe...............................
I don't think it would smell better, it's rendered animal fat.
You've not met the Portuguese Policia Maritima then?
There was a case a good few years ago, possibly Spain, where a fishing boat hit an anchored leisure vessel on anchor. The leisure vessel (can't remember whether power or sail) was found at fault for not showing correct light.
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Think the problem with parrafin lights is meeting the regs on visibility.
Yes but was he showing a light of the kind I described ? Was he showing any light at all?
MIT has since come to the rescue with a paper on the question:
https://www.technologyreview.com/s/539826/how-far-can-the-human-eye-see-a-candle-flame/
So there we have it, if your light is as bright as a candle you could see it at 2.7 kilometres - by calculation.
One day I am going to try it by experiment, one day.
You've not met the Portuguese Policia Maritima then?
There was a case a good few years ago, possibly Spain, where a fishing boat hit an anchored leisure vessel on anchor. The leisure vessel (can't remember whether power or sail) was found at fault for not showing correct light.
Pretty useless paper from a practical point of view. Takes no account of background of brighter shore lights or other boats displaying brighter ones to which eyes are drawn.
+ 1 to that. But I did like an RDF.I was musing over this a while ago. I think the only bit of electronics I could not do without is the echo sounder. Everything else has a workaround (but then I date from a generation when we thought nothing of doing a channel crossing by eyeball - preferred crossing was overnight so we could we make a landfall with the loom of the lighthouses.
I can't pretend to have done it myself, but there must be much greater satisfaction available from planning a passage on a chart, then navigating by visual (or audible*) proofs (or sufficient evidence from soundings) of one's whereabouts, and reaching a day or more later, a position close to where your reckoning calculated.
It may not be easy or even prudent to invariably rely on non-technical ways which are ultimately more fallible than the icy certainty of satellite-established GPS, amid fleets of other vessels who haven't used the old ways, but it's got to be more pleasing when it works.
I'd never suggest foregoing keeping a GPS set on board, in order to back-up one's conclusions.
Looking back, before anyone had GPS, I did once sail a dinghy from Chichester to Seaview, with barely a mile's visibility, and with no compass, chart, means of sounding or any knowledge of the tidal currents. Is that luck, or was I born to dead-reckon?![]()
* I was thinking of foghorns. But I guess most foghorns at fixed locations are silent these days, because everyone has GPS.![]()