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_xerces_ | 1 year ago

Curious how navigation at night was not possible without expensive equipment, sounds like they were relying only on starts in the morning and evening? Are the measuring something like angle of those morning/evening stars or their set/rise times with respect to the sun?

discuss

order

UniverseHacker|1 year ago

It is not true- the authors sound very inexperienced with celestial navigation. There are many ways including the lunar distance method to get a position at night with regular equipment. The math is more complex than a simple noon solar sighting, but it can be done with just a regular cheap plastic sextant and a watch.

It’s also no big deal to go 12 hours with no position. If you know your speed and heading you can accurately estimate your position much longer than that.

Overall, they also made it sound almost impossibly difficult for a large team of professionals, when solo and otherwise short handed recreational sailors have been reliably sailing around the world with celestial navigation for more than a century- through all possible conditions.

danielvf|1 year ago

Note that they were staying roughly 2 miles within the actual track, while having the bulk of the work being done by a combo of officers and newbs that they had just trained. That's high accuracy standards for celestial nav, not even counting that this is most of other people's first time doing this in anger.

throw0101a|1 year ago

> Curious how navigation at night was not possible without expensive equipment, sounds like they were relying only on starts in the morning and evening?

As a sibling comment notes, it is possible. There are tables for lunar distance:

* https://thenauticalalmanac.com/Lunar_Distance_Tables.html

* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lunar_distance_(navigation)

* https://www.starpath.com/resources2/brunner-lunars.pdf

The planets Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn can be used, as well as several dozen planets (lookup tables in an almanac)

* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nautical_almanac

* https://thenauticalalmanac.com

Two US military videos explaining the theory (ground points/GP, circle of position, etc):

* USAF: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UV1V9-nnaAs

* Army: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G4DRBi66cOA

The USAF has a video because that's how planes used to do navigation outside of radio range—sextants on the ceiling of the cockpit:

* https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C7gAiI79nOY

* https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xc3rAlCDf54

quercusa|1 year ago

And just how expensive is a bubble sextant?

ianburrell|1 year ago

I discovered that real Tamaya marine sextants are available on eBay for $100-150. They were 30x that new.

My understanding is that the sextants are coming from breaker yards in India where the sextants were left on ships and salvaged.

wrycoder|1 year ago

I have one I paid $150 for. But bubble sextants are usually only used on aircraft.