The Practical Navigator, and Seaman's New Daily Assistant: Being an Epitome of Navigation: Including the Different Methods of Working the Lunar Observations. With Every Particular Requisite for Keeping a Complete Journal at Sea ... To this Edition are Added ... the Requisite Tables Used with the Nautical Almanac in Determining the Longitude at Sea ...sold, 1791 - 296 sider |
Inni boken
Resultat 1-5 av 34
Side 20
... because the Index is 3 , I call it 5593 , which is the Number re- quired ; for when the Number is under 10 the Index is always o ; from 10 to 100 the Index is I ; from 100 to 1000 the Index is 2 i from 1000 to 10,000 the Index is 3 ...
... because the Index is 3 , I call it 5593 , which is the Number re- quired ; for when the Number is under 10 the Index is always o ; from 10 to 100 the Index is I ; from 100 to 1000 the Index is 2 i from 1000 to 10,000 the Index is 3 ...
Side 41
... because when the Sun comes to it , which is twice a Year , viz . about the 21st of March , at his Entrance into Aries , and again into Libra about the 23d of September ; then , making equal Day and Night throughout the World . III . The ...
... because when the Sun comes to it , which is twice a Year , viz . about the 21st of March , at his Entrance into Aries , and again into Libra about the 23d of September ; then , making equal Day and Night throughout the World . III . The ...
Side 42
... because fhe fails nearer to the Equator ; from whence the Latitude is counted upon the Meridian : but if a Ship fails from a South Latitude into a Northerly one , or from a North Latitude into a Southerly one , from the Difference of ...
... because fhe fails nearer to the Equator ; from whence the Latitude is counted upon the Meridian : but if a Ship fails from a South Latitude into a Northerly one , or from a North Latitude into a Southerly one , from the Difference of ...
Side 46
... because the fails nearer to the Equator , from whence the Latitude is reckoned . Wherefore in North Latitude sailing Northerly , or in South Latitude failing Southerly , the Difference of Latitude added to the Latitude left , gives the ...
... because the fails nearer to the Equator , from whence the Latitude is reckoned . Wherefore in North Latitude sailing Northerly , or in South Latitude failing Southerly , the Difference of Latitude added to the Latitude left , gives the ...
Side 46
... because the fails nearer to the Equator , from whence the Latitude is reckoned . Wherefore in North Latitude failing Northerly , or in South Lati- tude failing Southerly , the Difference of Latitude added to the Lati- tude left , gives ...
... because the fails nearer to the Equator , from whence the Latitude is reckoned . Wherefore in North Latitude failing Northerly , or in South Lati- tude failing Southerly , the Difference of Latitude added to the Lati- tude left , gives ...
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
againſt alfo Altitude Anchor Angle Arch Azimuth Bafe becauſe Cafe Cape Chart Co-fecant Co-fine Co-tang Coaft Column Compafs Courfe Courſe Declination Degrees Diff Difference of Latitude Difference of Longitude Dift Dep Dift Lat ditto Eaft Epact Equator Extent will reach fails fame Fathoms fecond fhews fhould find the Courſe find the Difference firft firſt fome ftands fteer fubtract fuch Funchal half haul High Water Hour Angle Hours Ifland laft Latitude and Departure lefs Line of Numbers Line of Sines Logarithm Long meaſured Mercator's Sailing Merid Meridian Meridian Altitude Middle Latitude Miles Moon Moon's muſt N.fine neareſt Noon North Obfervation oppofite Parallax parallel Place Plane Sailing Point Radius Rifing Right Afcenfion Secant ſhe Ship Ship's Side South Star Star's Sun's Suppofe Table Tangent thefe theſe thofe uſed Variation Weft Wefterly Wind ΙΟ
Populære avsnitt
Side 19 - The circumference of every circle is supposed to be divided into 360 equal parts, called degrees ; and each degree into 60 equal parts, called minutes ; and each minute into 60 equal parts, called seconds ; and these into thirds, etc.
Side 14 - EXAMPLE. If the diameter of a circle be 7 inches, and the circumference 22, what is the circumference of another circle, the diameter of which is 14 inches ? Extend from 7 to 22, that extent will reach from 14 to 44 the same way.
Side 32 - ... the sum of the segments of the base is to the sum of the sides as the difference of the sides to the difference of the segments of the base.
Side 14 - All fractions found in this line must be decimals ; and if they are not, they must be reduced into decimals, which is easily done by extending the compasses from the denominator to the numerator; that extent laid the same way, from 1 in the middle or right hand, will reach to the decimal required.
Side 263 - A figurative expression for the timbers. /fuie at anchor, is when a ship is held by her anchors, and is not driven by wind or tide. To ride athwart, is to ride with the ship's side to the tide. To ride hoirie fallen, is •when the water breaks into the hawse in a rough sea.
Side 151 - Complement of the Latitude Is to Radius, So is the Sine of the Sun or Star's Declination To the Sine of the true Amplitude ; Which is always of the fame Name with the Declination, whether North or South.
Side 120 - The most usual way of discovering the set and drift of an unknown current, is thus : Let three or four men take a boat a little way from the ship : and by a rope fastened to the boat's stern, let down a heavy iron pot or loaded kettle to the depth of 80 or 100 fathoms ; then heave the log, and the number of knots run out in half a minute will be the miles the current sets per hour, and the bearing of the log will show the set of it.
Side 14 - The solid content of any bale, box, chest, fcc. is found by extending from 1 to the breadth ; that extent will reach from the depth to a fourth number, and the extent from 1 to that fourth number will reach from the length to the solid content.
Side 205 - PM per watch, the altitude of the sun's lower limb was 28° 20' above the horizon of the sea, the eye being elevated 20 feet above the surface of the water, and the sun's bearing by compass S. by W. and at 2h. 58m. 2Gs. PM by watch, the altitude of the sun's lower limb was 16° 41...
Side 164 - A ship lying-to under her mainsail, with her starboard tacks aboard, comes up E. by S. and falls off NE by E. there being one point westerly variation, and she makes 5 points lee-way — what course does she make good ? The middle between E. by S. and NE by E. is E. by N. ; and by allowing 6 points to the left hand (viz.