beasly
Well-Known Member
Has arrived.
I am humbled.
Much more on this over the years, for it will be years--
First impressons.
It weighs close to 10 lbs.
It is an important part of American history--a working part of it. It has been on sailing ships since 1802 and then on through WWII.
Bowditch died in 1838 and he is still relevant today--I will be using it.
Think Far/AIM--then make it all AIM at nearly 900 pages. Then, consider the technical content in the AIM and kick the standards up by a factor of 2 or 3 in some parts.
It is Maritime based--but any Pilot will find it interesting.
btw, The co-efficient of compressibility of seawater is 0.000046 pr bar under standard conditions.
Browsing Section 4 on Celestial Navigation I learned there is such a thing as a "Celestial Horizon". Basically, it is a spherical coordinate system, but the position and orientation of the earth within this thing is NOT Earth centric. there is an adventure right there.
In summary, if you care about Navigation, you owe it to yourself to investigate this book.
Amazon also had the 50'th anniversary edition of "Star Maps" for less than 10 bucks.
It is organized by month, so this month, it is "September Sky Map" . I haven't used it yet and am a bit leery about it as it is "optimized" for the 40'th parallel--i.e. Philadelphia PA where it was originally published.
That said, it makes sense! The maps look like a Maltese Cross and the words are printed so that you can orient yourself N,S,E,W and read the words without having to re-orient yourself. For example--let the top of this post be North--well you are reading the words just fine. Now, turn your monitor on its side to E,W or South and you cannot read the words. This book fixes that. So, you turn N,S, E or W and you can do pilotage.
I have it in my car and will be using it as I get the chance.
I am not sure if it is "out of date". I am thinking that "like a stopped watch is correct twice a day" I lucked out on this.
Goal number 1--identify the North Star.
In summary, "The Bowditch" is a serious work. Give it a browse if you have the chance.
Cheers.
I am humbled.
Much more on this over the years, for it will be years--
First impressons.
It weighs close to 10 lbs.
It is an important part of American history--a working part of it. It has been on sailing ships since 1802 and then on through WWII.
Bowditch died in 1838 and he is still relevant today--I will be using it.
Think Far/AIM--then make it all AIM at nearly 900 pages. Then, consider the technical content in the AIM and kick the standards up by a factor of 2 or 3 in some parts.
It is Maritime based--but any Pilot will find it interesting.
btw, The co-efficient of compressibility of seawater is 0.000046 pr bar under standard conditions.
Browsing Section 4 on Celestial Navigation I learned there is such a thing as a "Celestial Horizon". Basically, it is a spherical coordinate system, but the position and orientation of the earth within this thing is NOT Earth centric. there is an adventure right there.
In summary, if you care about Navigation, you owe it to yourself to investigate this book.
Amazon also had the 50'th anniversary edition of "Star Maps" for less than 10 bucks.
It is organized by month, so this month, it is "September Sky Map" . I haven't used it yet and am a bit leery about it as it is "optimized" for the 40'th parallel--i.e. Philadelphia PA where it was originally published.
That said, it makes sense! The maps look like a Maltese Cross and the words are printed so that you can orient yourself N,S,E,W and read the words without having to re-orient yourself. For example--let the top of this post be North--well you are reading the words just fine. Now, turn your monitor on its side to E,W or South and you cannot read the words. This book fixes that. So, you turn N,S, E or W and you can do pilotage.
I have it in my car and will be using it as I get the chance.
I am not sure if it is "out of date". I am thinking that "like a stopped watch is correct twice a day" I lucked out on this.
Goal number 1--identify the North Star.
In summary, "The Bowditch" is a serious work. Give it a browse if you have the chance.
Cheers.