
NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: sextant calibration
From: George Huxtable
Date: 2006 May 14, 18:34 +0100
From: George Huxtable
Date: 2006 May 14, 18:34 +0100
Red appeared to argue with my earlier statement- | "But one adjustment that does NOT EVER | need to be made is the zeroing of index error, whatever it may be." in writing | The Plath companies apparently disagree with you, George. Their sextants are | built with an extra wheel and scale to allow the user to zero out the index | error. Would I do this every time? No, certainly not. But it is something that a | user certainly would do the first time they got the sextant, and were trying to | set up a baseline of adjustments on it, including the mirror positions. | | More like, to quote Gilbert & Sullivan's Mikado, "Never? Well, hardly ever!"What I said was that the index error adjustment, to bring it to zero, does not ever need to be made, and that's a correct statement. The fact that Plath have arranged things so that if you want to adjust it, it's easy to do so, does not invalidate what I said. That's not the only instrument for which such provision has been made. I remember seeing an ebony octant, from the early 1800s, provided with a lever-on-lever mechanism for fine-tweaking the angle of the horizon mirror, for just that purpose. It provided just the right sensitivity of adjustment, and stayed nicely put when you let it be. But just because you CAN make such an adjustment doesn't mean you NEED TO. When Red says it's something "a user would certainly do the first time", I wonder where he gets that certainty from. George. contact George Huxtable at george@huxtable.u-net.com or at +44 1865 820222 (from UK, 01865 820222) or at 1 Sandy Lane, Southmoor, Abingdon, Oxon OX13 5HX, UK.