
NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: Sextants
From: Lu Abel
Date: 1999 Jul 27, 11:46 PM
From: Lu Abel
Date: 1999 Jul 27, 11:46 PM
Allow me to echo everyone's comments about the Davis and Celesticomp. One of the absolute thrills as a celestial student is taking your first shots (from an known point, probably on land), reducing them, and plotting a LOP which BY GOD IS CLOSE TO WHERE I TOOK THE SHOT!!!! Makes one feel like Christopher Columbus (ignoring all the side discussions of whether he used celestial at all :-). One can probably learn celestial using the $20 Davis Mark 3 sextant (and people have even used it for offshore navigation) but the thrill of seeing a LOP within a mile or two of your position likely will not occur -- the instrument is just not that accurate. The more expensive Davis's are good learning instruments. I've seen lots of students in the Power Squadron courses (including myself) achieve fine results with them. You don't have to get a Mark 25 -- IMHO (which others on the list may disagree with), half-silvered mirrors are just as good as full-silvered but transparent mirrors. The Davis Mk 15 and Mk 20 are exactly the same sextants except with the half-silvered mirrors. The Mk 15 does not have a nighttime illuminator, but one might do just as well with a penlight (especially one of the $9.95 laser pointers which are so popular (and controversial) among schoolchildren). Glancing at the latest West catalog, a Mk 15 is $109 as opposed to $189 for a Mk 25. I also think that with a simple scientific calculator (about $15 at KMart) you can do perfectly fine sight reductions using an almanac for the body's position and then standard spherical trig for intercept and azimuth. And you'll learn a lot more about the steps involved in sight reduction. To stir some additional controversy: I just don't get the people who say "use celestial, don't depend on electronics because you never know when they will fail" and then happily use a Celesticomp. Lu Abel At 01:30 PM 7/27/99 GMT, you wrote: > Im a beginning Celestial Navigator and am seeking some >advise...I have access to a Davis MK25 Sextant to learn with..or >SHould I purchase the Astra IIIb to learn with..?? I don't plan any >crossing in the immediate future...One other thing, I was also >thinking of purchasing the Celesticomp V for checking my math and >learning with it. or should I pass on the puter to learn the >conventional way.... > > Thanks > > Barry > >P.S. If this has been discussed before I apologize, I cant find an >archive..!! >