You *could* get a fix with a sextant from the GPS satellites if you could see 
them. I am not sure, but they might be too small to pick up with the naked eye. 
You can see the ISS if the sun hits it right. You could get an LOP from that if 
anyone worked out a table for it.
*in real life, even if they were easy to see, the speed would make getting an 
accurate shot timed just perfect pretty hard to do.

Joe Della Barba

From: CnC-List [mailto:cnc-list-boun...@cnc-list.com] On Behalf Of Ronald B. 
Frerker
Sent: Monday, January 28, 2013 10:31 AM
To: cnc-list@cnc-list.com
Subject: Re: Stus-List Sextant

The sextant is comparable to a hand saw and chisel these days, but as pointed 
out, the use and study of celestial nav allows one to understand the whole 
concept of nav with celestial objects, which is the basis of GPS.  In the case 
of GPS, the celestial objects are manmade satellites.
Ron
Wild Cheri
C&C 30
STL


--- On Sun, 1/27/13, Antoine Rose 
<antoine.r...@videotron.ca<mailto:antoine.r...@videotron.ca>> wrote:

From: Antoine Rose <antoine.r...@videotron.ca<mailto:antoine.r...@videotron.ca>>
Subject: Re: Stus-List Sextant
To: cnc-list@cnc-list.com<mailto:cnc-list@cnc-list.com>
Date: Sunday, January 27, 2013, 9:43 PM
Hi Chuck,
You're absolutely right, sextant will eventually be seen only in museums. A 
good fix with a sextant will give you a position within half a mile margin of 
error, if all goes very well. One have to wait four hours between two fixes 
(one in the morning followed by the one in the afternoon with an optional noon 
fix). None of that compare to the precision of a GPS. In my crossings, I had 
three GPS (handheld, one connected to the laptop and the AIS). The sextant was 
really to have fun and practice during leisure time.
Having learned the hard way thirty years ago how to navigate in fog and 
currents on the St-Lawrence River with only a deep-sounder and a compass, I'm 
not interested in going back.

However, learning how to use a sextant gives you more than a position, it gives 
you knowledge of how celestial and earth movements intersect and also gives you 
a deeper appreciation for our predecessors. Even if it's only about 
intellectual curiosity, I feel it's worth it.
The Astra IIIb is supposed to be a fine and affordable sextant. Actually, if 
you look at it, it looks very much like a chinese copy of the Cassens & Plath. 
I personally have two Freiberger, mostly because I tend to collect beautiful 
nautical objects.

Antoine (C&C 30 Cousin)




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