NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: 2102-D
From: Dave Weilacher
Date: 2001 Aug 30, 9:45 AM
From: Dave Weilacher
Date: 2001 Aug 30, 9:45 AM
What I wish for is degree templates for every 5 degrees instead of 10 degrees. ...and even more importantly, that somebody sold one that was large enough for me to read without a magnifying glass. It took me a long while to get comfortable with the orientation of the starfinder. So; for the love of heaven, don't flop it over on me. -----Original Message----- From Dale TilsonDate: Thu, 30 Aug 2001 10:05:29 -0500 To: NAVIGATION-L@LISTSERV.WEBKAHUNA.COM Subject: Re: [NAV-L] 2102-D Re: That's on my list of books to hunt up or buy, Russell. Thanks for the Re: recommendation. Re: Re: And yes, you're right; it's a 2102-D, although I found several sites where Re: the USCG, of all people, refer to it as a "2101-D". Henceforth, mine shall Re: be known as "Gilbert". ;-) Re: Re: Does anyone else wish the thing were printed "backward", so that it would Re: be right if you held it up over your head, instead of having to Re: omnipotently envision from the outside of the celestial sphere? Or would Re: that be too "lubberly"? Re: Re: Dale Re: Re: At 04:19 PM 8/30/01 +0200, you wrote: Re: >Have you seen The Starfinder Book... (see Re: >http://www.celestaire.com/catalog/products/5304.html) Re: >It is quite good. Re: > Re: >(I assume you guys mean 2102-D ) Re: > Re: >Russell Re: -- Dave Weilacher .USCG lic. 889968 .ASA certifed sailing instructor 990800 .AS400 RPG programmer _______________________________________________ Get your free email from http://webmail.earthlink.net