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E-raamat: Emergency Navigation, 2nd Edition: Improvised and No-Instrument Methods for the Prudent Mariner

  • Formaat: 288 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 14-May-2008
  • Kirjastus: International Marine Publishing Co
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780071643382
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  • Formaat: 288 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 14-May-2008
  • Kirjastus: International Marine Publishing Co
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780071643382
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Find Your Way at Sea, No Matter What

“Inherently interesting and fun to read . . . provides the clearest understanding of general navigation principles we've seen yet.”--BoatU.S.

“Thorough and authoritative.”--Sea Kayaker

“A definitive work of instant appeal to seamen of all levels of experience.”--The Navigation Foundation

Every sailor knows that instruments can fail. Things get wet, break, fall overboard. Whether you’re safe on your boat or drifting in a life raft, let David Burch show you how to find your way no matter what navigational equipment you have. Often relying on common materials like a small stick, a plastic bottle, even a pair of sunglasses, Burch explains how to make use of all available means--from the ancient skills of Polynesian navigators to the contrails of airliners overhead--to calculate speed, direction, latitude, and longitude and to perform all aspects of piloting and dead reckoning. Learn how to

  • Steer by sun, stars, wind, and swells
  • Estimate current and leeway
  • Improvise your own knotmeter or plumb-bob sextant
  • Find the sun in a fogbank
  • Estimate latitude with a plate and a knotted string
  • And more vital information
List of Figures and Tables
viii
Foreword to the First Edition xii
Preface to the Second Edition xiii
Acknowledgments xv
Introduction
1(8)
What Is Emergency Navigation?
1(1)
The Scope of This Book
2(1)
Preparation for Navigational Emergencies
3(6)
Time and Place at Sea
9(6)
Latitude Regions and Seasons Defined
10(2)
Time in Navigation
12(1)
Finding Position versus Keeping Track of Position
13(2)
Directions at Sea
15(12)
Choosing a Route
16(1)
Compass Checks
17(4)
Steering without a Compass
21(6)
Steering by Wind and Swells
27(15)
Reading the Wind
29(5)
Swells, Waves, and Ripples
34(3)
Wind Shifts
37(5)
Steering by the Stars
42(33)
Know the Whole Sky
42(1)
How the Stars Move
43(4)
Steering by the North Star
47(6)
The Summer Triangle
53(1)
The Great Square of Pegasus
54(1)
Finding North without the North Star
54(2)
Steering by Orion
56(1)
Steering by Gemini and Procyon
57(1)
Steering by Scorpio
58(1)
Steering by the Southern Cross and the South Pole
59(3)
Steering by Overhead Stars
62(2)
Steering by Zenith Stars
64(6)
Star Paths
70(2)
Timing Low Stars
72(3)
Steering by the Sun
75(24)
Sunrise and Sunset
75(3)
Morning Sun and Afternoon Sun
78(4)
Local Apparent Noon
82(4)
Solar Time Method
86(3)
The Shadow-Tip Method
89(4)
The Tropics Rule for the Sun
93(1)
Sun Crossing Due East or West
93(1)
Sun Compasses
94(4)
When the Sun Is Obscured
98(1)
Steering by Other Things in the Sky
99(16)
The Moon
99(7)
The Planets
106(2)
Clouds, Birds, and Planes
108(6)
Satellites
114(1)
Steering in Fog or Under Cloudy Skies
115(9)
How to Make a Magnetic Compass
116(1)
Direction Finding with a Portable Radio
117(2)
Streaming a Line along the Centerline
119(2)
Finding the Sun as a Viking Would
121(3)
Currents
124(8)
Ocean Currents
125(3)
Tidal Currents
128(1)
Wind-Driven Currents
129(1)
Coastal Currents
130(2)
Dead Reckoning
132(16)
Emergency DR
132(2)
Finding Boat Speed
134(2)
DR Errors from Speed and Direction
136(6)
DR Errors from Current and Leeway
142(4)
Progress to Weather
146(2)
Latitude at Sea
148(38)
Makeshift Altitude Measurements and Calibrations
148(7)
Makeshift Altitude Corrections
155(1)
Latitude from Polaris
156(3)
Latitude from Zenith Stars
159(3)
Latitude from Horizon-Grazing Stars
162(7)
Latitude from Double Transits of Circumpolar Stars
169(1)
Latitude from the Sun at LAN
170(8)
Latitude from the Length of Day
178(5)
Keeping Track of Latitude
183(3)
Longitude at Sea
186(15)
Longitude from Sunrise or Sunset
187(2)
Longitude from LAN (the Equation of Time)
189(8)
Finding UTC from a Known Position
197(1)
Keeping Track of Longitude
197(4)
Coastal Piloting without Instruments
201(18)
Signs of Land at Sea
202(5)
Visible Range of Lights and Land
207(4)
Distance Off
211(5)
Running Fix from Radio Bearings
216(1)
Course Made Good in Current
217(2)
What to Do with What You've Got
219(31)
Routine Navigation with Everything
219(7)
Position by Radio Contact
226(2)
Everything but UTC
228(6)
Everything but a Sextant
234(6)
Everything but Sight Reduction Tables
240(5)
Everything but a Compass
245(1)
Everything but an Almanac
246(3)
Nothing but UTC
249(1)
Annotated Bibliography
250(10)
Basic Marine Navigation
250(1)
Almanac Data
251(1)
Stars and Star Identification
252(1)
Finding Longitude without Time
252(1)
No-Instrument Navigation
253(3)
Emergency Seamanship
256(1)
Periodicals of Interest to Emergency Navigation
256(1)
Meteorology and Oceanography
257(1)
Published Aids to Navigation
258(2)
Index 260
David Burch, the director of the Starpath School of Navigation in Seattle, Washington, has been teaching navigation and seamanship since 1977. He has logged more than 60,000 sea miles, including three wins in the trans-Pacific Victoria to Maui yacht race. He is the author of nine books on marine navigation, including Emergency Navigation (International Marine, 1984), and his magazine articles have appeared in Cruising World, Ocean Navigator, Sailing, and Sea Kayaker. He holds a U.S. Coast Guard Master's license (100 tons). He is also a past Fulbright Scholar and holds a PhD in physics. HOMETOWN: Seattle, WA