06-29-2023, 04:05 AM
(05-17-2021, 11:47 PM)Rumata Wrote: Greetings, gentlemen,
I'm pretty sure that many of you are familiar with the method, old one, which I recently discovered for myself.
I refer to C.A. ("Cloudy Weather" Johnson's "Double Chronometer Method"). I found the copy of old book and read and tried to use this method.
I came across this thread yesterday while browsing and joined the forum. A few years ago I worked a sight by Johnson's method. I was proud that I was the only person alive who had used this method. But I was wrong! It seems that there is a small group of strange people who enjoy using old navigational tables.
I have the 1905 edition of On Finding the Lat and Long in Cloudy Weather etc.
I believe that Johnson's method is a modified Sumner method. Modified in the sense that the lat & long are determined by calculation rather then by plotting. In Johnson's era the ony practicable way of doing the calculations was by tables. Today with a calculator the calculations are easy.
You mention pub 260 for azimuth. In my opinion the A B C tables are the easiest and quickest way of finding azimuth. I use the tables from Norie but thay are also in Burton and Blackburne. I cannot find them in Inman. The get a mention in Bowditch 1958 but the actual tables are not included.
For what it is worth I am an armchair navigator. I have never navigated when my life depended on it. From my username you my be able to guess another of my navigational interests.