NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: Arificial horizons
From: Mike Burkes
Date: 2003 Jan 3, 18:49 -0800
From: Mike Burkes
Date: 2003 Jan 3, 18:49 -0800
Hi folks! I have had good results using baby oil in my Davis artificial horizon with my Simex Mariner and Astra3 sextants. Daytime Moon shots can be difficult and only the bright stars like Sirius and planets Venus and Jupiter produce good results for me. Thanks! Mike Burkes
----- Original Message -----From: Bruce StarkSent: Friday, January 03, 2003 4:22 PMTo: NAVIGATION-L@LISTSERV.WEBKAHUNA.COMSubject: Arificial horizonsI haven't had much experience with artificial horizons, but have picked up
some ideas. Major Ellicot, who DID have a lot of experience, and provided the
artificial horizons for the Lewis and Clark expedition, said the roof
sheltering the water should not touch the pan. Just common sense actually.
Doesn't take much of a puff of air to shake the roof and ruffle the water.
And I expect that, no matter what kind of liquid you're using you need a roof
if there's any breeze to speak of. The old mercury horizons had roofs.
Last spring I built a roof that was quick to set up and take down. It was big
enough to enclose a nine-inch pie pan, and held in shape by three slip-fit
dowels. Had a cloth skirt around the bottom to fit it to uneven ground. Thin
pieces of wood shimmed the water pan more or less level. I got excellent
results in what were said to be 40 mile an hour winds. I gave it to an
engineer who was impressed with it. Hoped he'd draw it up, since I don't know
how, but haven't heard from him.
Year before last I did some experimenting with a 7 by 9 inch piece of
top-quality mirror. Rested it on three screws, quarter-inch national fine,
coming up through a metal plate. Had to pay about $70 for a Starret
machinist's level. Worked great, but tended to drift off slightly as things
warmed up in the sun. Also took too much time to set up to suit my taste.
Main problem, though, was I was afraid someone would damage his or her
eyesight by accidentally getting a blast of reflected sun. It was strong!
Water's not much good when you want the stars, or the moon in daylight, but
it sure is handy for the sun. Properly sheltered, it's perfectly steady.
I hope others will continue posting their experiences and ideas. For one
thing, can any liquid other than mercury make it easy to get the daytime
moon, or the stars? I have no experience with oil, etc.
Bruce