Two On A Big Ocean The Story of the First Circumnavigation
of the Pacific Basin
in a Small Sailing Ship


      

Other Books by
Hal Roth
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LOPs My $.02


Subject: LOPs My $.02
From: Gordon Talge (gtalge@XXX.XXX)
Date: Thu Jun 24 1999 - 14:00:25 EDT


Just thought I would throw in my $.02 on the LOP question.

I have several books on celestial navigation and they are
not consistant on how they draw the LOP and Az lines on
the plotting sheets.

Some of them ( PVH Weems ) have a circle around the assumed position
with no arrows, others have arrows on everything. So who is to say.

On Navy ships, the rules and procedures of navigation are ridged and
must be followed to the letter. ( I would hate to be the sailor that
ran the aircraft carrier on to the beach ) No doute the Navy wants everything
just so. I know that the Navy has a certain way of doing things. My father-in-
law worked on radar on the USS Sanders in WWII. He always said, "There is
the right way, the wrong way, and the Navy way".

For civilians, if you are the navigator on a commercial ship,
no doute you have to comply with the rules of the company that owns the
ship and of course, maritime law or end up in trouble ( a la Exxon Valdez ).

A single person on their own private boat, can no doute do pretty much
what they want.

-- Gordon

                                     ,,,
                                    (. .)
         +-----------------------ooO-(_)-Ooo----------------------+
         | Gordon Talge WB6YKK e-mail: gtalge@XXX.XXX |
         | Department of Mathematics QTH: Loma Linda, CA |
         | Notre Dame High School Lat. N 34° 03.1' |
         | Riverside, CA 92506 Long. W 117° 15.2' |
         | http://www.pe.net/ND |
         +--------------------------------------------------------+





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