"pocket sundial" feels like a flinstones gag, I love it!
@aleisterlavey97164 ай бұрын
I have one that folds up to a "globe" of 3 rings and a plate with a movable genomehole 😂 to adjust for date and on the outer ring with latitude adjustable hanging. You hang it and turn it till the light points through the hole on the inside of the hour ring and you have time and true geographical North. I made a leather pocket so it fits on my wrist, so technically it is a wristwatch/compass
@DerMarkus19824 ай бұрын
@@aleisterlavey9716 Genome? I am 100% certain you mean gnomon. That's the shadow-casting provision (just a rod in the simplest case).
@aleisterlavey97164 ай бұрын
@@DerMarkus1982 yeah. Autocorrect is a female dog. 😅
@thecianinator4 ай бұрын
That's because it was (or at least Fred had a sundial watch in one episode)
@skydust12694 ай бұрын
I want me one. I gotta have one.
@lunondisposable53823 ай бұрын
A sundial made for Great Britain seems awfully optimistic
@bertjesklotepinoАй бұрын
The Queen once walked through her garden. And she was shown a sundial by the guy who was walking with her, and his camera crew was filming it. He pointed out how it was no longer in the sun. The Queen, May She do whatever she likes up there as she did down here, took note and demanded that it should be relocated. No clue if that ever happened. But, if the Queen, RIP (for some and others may say: Good Riddance), had her own sundial in Britain in her Garden, then my guess is that it does work. From time to time.
@melainekerfaou84184 ай бұрын
It just gave me an idea for a fun smartphone sundial app: with a very short shutter speed and a bit of image processing the front camera measures the direction of the sun; the accelerometer makes sure the phone is level; the magnetometer knows where magnetic north is; the gps chip knows latitude and longitude; and the 5G connectivity can download the latest lookup tables for all the necessary corrections. The app would thus be telling the time by using all of the phone's sensors and chips except the clock :)
@ChrisStaecker4 ай бұрын
@@melainekerfaou8418 I approve
@reddragonflyxx6574 ай бұрын
I love how you need to get the time for the GPS to work.
@laurencefinston70364 ай бұрын
Photographing the sun is _very dangerous_ without _certified_ protective gear for the eyes and will almost certainly damage the camera without an appropriate filter. Assuming both of these things are being used, it's a great idea, but I don't think the phone needs to be level. The face of a sundial doesn't need to be and with all the other data, the necessary adjustments can be made. The algorithm for finding the intersection of the line from the sun (assumed to be infinitely distant) through a point on the gnomon with a plane doesn't care whether the plane is vertical or horizontal. It only cares if there is an intersection, i.e., all of the points on the line can't also lie in the plane. I've implemented this algorithm and it's freeware, so you're welcome to use it, if you want to program this app (unless you'd rather do it yourself or use something else, of course). Admittedly less fun and interesting, but it would be possible to implement this without photographing the sun at all, because the position of the sun at any time is either known or can be calculated, especially if one is already using tables (a database) to look up corrections. In fact, it could be done for any location, which might make it fun and interesting again.
@melainekerfaou84184 ай бұрын
@@laurencefinston7036 thanks a lot But I think I'll stick to fantasy specs and a fictitious app (like the nonsensical phone specs that are a regular feature in the xkcd webcomic :)
@pyglik22964 ай бұрын
That would be cool. It could either tell you the time directly as you said, or just get your and sun's position to put a simulated shadow on a face like this so you have to position the phone and add the corrections yourself!
@frankwales4 ай бұрын
NO-ONE expects the Soviet Acquisition!
@davidnull55903 ай бұрын
Nice job there, really good.
@elideaver4 ай бұрын
That Louisville pronunciation was a thing of beauty
@Haezard3 ай бұрын
The fact you scanned that document speaks to your character.. You appreciate the dissemination of information to make it known. Good man.
@umbraklat4 ай бұрын
Fantastic video! I loved the weird historical backstory.
@alfredklek4 ай бұрын
Well that was cool. I'm from Connecticut and used to work with a guy from Ansonia. I also own a Poljot watch. It's interesting how important this state used to be.
@laurencefinston70364 ай бұрын
This was interesting. I'd heard about portable sundials but never saw one before. In 2007 I did some work on sundials (available for free on the internet) and lately I've been working on the subject again (and the results will also be free and available on the internet). There are books in print on laying out sundials and they all describe graphical methods for doing this on paper. I figured out that it was much easier to do this in 3D and did that instead. (Someone knowledgeable about sundials confirmed that I was correct.) The old methods were developed before there were 3D graphics programs. They are similar in that sense to linear perspective, which is also much easier to do (and more accurate) with 3D points and matrix multiplication. The deviation of magnetic north from true north can be found in the Astronomical Almanac and Nautical Almanac for each year. The hour lines on the face of a sundial are simply the projections of the meridians of a sphere divided into 24 equal sections with 0 hours at position of the gnomon onto the face of the sundial. The gnomon points to the north pole of the celestial sphere, where the star Polaris is conveniently located. The sun travels across the sky from east to west on a circle called the ecliptic, which is the projection of Earth's orbit around the sun onto the celestial sphere. The ecliptic is rotated with respect to the celestial equator (and Earth's equator) by approx. 23.4° (the "obliquitiy of the ecliptic") and the whole sky seems to rotate about Polaris from east to west, taking the ecliptic along with it. The sun is also moving along the ecliptic from west to east, but not very fast, so in the course of a day, it doesn't appear to move very much. What a sundial tells you is true local solar time, which I think is much more interesting than mean solar time or clock time.
@rogerharris2313 ай бұрын
I do all of my sundial designs now using 3D models in Google SketchUp -- it's SO much easier than doing calculations, especially when you have a surface that isn't level or a vertical wall that doesn't face directly south. Those calculations are complicated and easy to screw up, but with a 3D model, you just need to be accurate with the orientation of your gnomon and your surface.
@ApolloNastyАй бұрын
Came from the KZbin short, subbed and about to binge your content ❤😂
@DFabry1015 күн бұрын
So much great content lol
@BZ-bo8dp4 ай бұрын
Gnomon is an island.
@AndrzejPiascik-l3w3 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@ChrisStaecker3 ай бұрын
Thanks a lot!
@rafagd4 ай бұрын
That was a plot twist at the end I wasn't expecting.
@chadwickwhall4 ай бұрын
Love your videos! I keep a few slide rules in my classroom for helping students understand logarithms and have showed a few of your videos to students when we get to talking about old technology. This video gave me some ideas for my trig unit!
@TomCarlson4 ай бұрын
Needs an Addiator slapped on the back for making the calculations.
@WolvenMother4 ай бұрын
This is honestly super cool. I bet anyone proficient in reading sundials would pull this out as a party trick.
@billf_etcАй бұрын
The zoom in on picture of the soviet soldier rocking a watch on both hands is great.
@ChrisStaeckerАй бұрын
@@billf_etc waiting for someone to notice that…
@_D_P_3 ай бұрын
Love this mix of math, technology, and history. Subscribed.
@MrEMeat-kk9tc4 ай бұрын
By the time you’ve calculated the time it’s later
@madeintexas3d4423 ай бұрын
Surprisingly I came across this channel as it looked like it was Michael's super backers first subscription. So glad I decided to click on his channel and it led me here. I had seen the thumbnail for this sundial video but could not find it when I went back to watch it.
@staycurious86504 ай бұрын
As always, quite interesting. Thanks. Your hint about the pole having moved since then might be related to the weakening magnetic field of Earth, also since about the same time, worth looking into.
@pyglik22964 ай бұрын
I was at a museum recently and I got excited when I saw machines I knew from your channel there; a Burroughs calculating machine, Brunsviga, Addiator and most importantly the Curta! They even had Napier's Bones!
@ChrisStaecker4 ай бұрын
Nice! Where was it?
@Jambivids4 ай бұрын
The short was good but it wasn't quite long enough, this video takes the cake
@martinda74464 ай бұрын
I loved this. Wonderful.
@skydust12694 ай бұрын
He's gotta be a hell of a professor. LOL
@makenchips3 ай бұрын
What are great share I really enjoyed this one!
@just_a_quick_ride4 ай бұрын
Nice that the UK versions went as far as Aberdeen and Inverness at 57 deg N, but I feel like sundials would be strictly a summer-only business round here
@Salsmachev4 ай бұрын
Dang, I came into this thinking I needed a portable sundial, and left thinking I need a Poljot watch. Also why would you make a sundial and not include a sextant for determining latitude? Seems like an oversight that massively brings down the quality of the tool.
@Salsmachev4 ай бұрын
@@creamwobbly Sadly it seems they only made wristwatches. By the way, couldn't help but notice your username. Are you a Wobbly, as in Bill Haywood?
@LunaticTheCat4 ай бұрын
It's wild to see the radium dial ad on the last page of the manual.
@shaunsimmons55124 ай бұрын
I thought this up back in high school! I was sure I was going to make a mint! Not surprised it was an idea who's time had already come. Still want to figure out how to build one.
@Khartsyz3 ай бұрын
This is one of the best YT videos I've seen in a while!!! Perfect storytelling, amazing plot twists and beautiful camera and editing work! One of my favorite parts is the song at the end, but it left me a bit confused... Who wrote it? Is there a full version I can listen to? What's the story behind it's creation? The link in the description is only somewhat useful...
@ChrisStaecker3 ай бұрын
I made the music- it's a song by the Coup which they recorded once for a Patton Oswalt standup special. I heard it once and the "money murder and mathematics" line stuck in my head. Then about 6 months later I made my version without ever re-listening to the original. There is no longer or "full" version of mine- I just made it to be used in my videos. The Coup apparently scrapped that song and reworked some parts of it into other songs on their album 2 years later. But they abandoned the "money murder and mathematics" part entirely, which is the only part I took! A bit of a Ship of Theseus situation.
@garydzidowski11344 ай бұрын
I had that exact model (well, it was actually my dad's, I "borrowed" it when I found it in a box in the attic) I used it a few times when I was in the Scouts. DST non-sense caused me to loose interest. It probably disappeared in one of my mom's cleaning purges.
@kulturfreund663112 күн бұрын
Futuristic .👍
@latty_g4 ай бұрын
Great video, as always - loved it!
@TheGyroBarqusShow4 ай бұрын
I have a Poljot watch from the 70s and damn man do i love that watch ❤
@tilasole32523 ай бұрын
Would like to see a video on Japanese benzine pocket warmers
@TheJamesM4 ай бұрын
You have a great storytelling voice.
@Pedritox09532 ай бұрын
Great video!
@laurencefinston70364 ай бұрын
An interesting thing about laying out sundials the way I described in my previous post is that you can't just calculate the position of the sun (azimuth and elevation) and draw a line from a point representing it through the tip of the gnomon to find the intersection with the face of the dial. The sun is assumed to be infinitely far away, so you have to "work backwards": That is, you have to find the vector `v' from the point `b' at the base of the gnomon (where it intersects with the dial, that is, the origin of the hour lines) to the sun, add `v' to the point `t' at the tip of the gnomon to get point `p' and find the intersection of the line `tp' with the plane of the face. That will be the tip of the shadow for any given moment (during the day, of course). You can't use the base of the gnomon, because it lies in the plane of the face of the sundial, so no shadow.
@OldManBOMBIN4 ай бұрын
4:15 From Kentucky, and appreciate the proper pronunciation of loovle
@skydust12694 ай бұрын
This has got to be the coolest way to tell someone the time. "What time is it?" Give me second to figure it out and I'll tell ya.
@zarniwoopinperth15 күн бұрын
Great content 👌
@davidegaruti25824 ай бұрын
These kinds of astronomical gadgets are neat and it's a shame we stopped using astronomy in our daily lives to do things ... We need to recognize where the cardinal points are , or to just look at the night sky , Knowing wich planet is out is also very nice , i remember watching the rings of saturn once ... It's a different type of mind blown compared to mathematical gadgets i feel : They show you quirks of our tought , These show you immense objects beyond our comprension on immense scales
@biquinary4 ай бұрын
I always love your videos
@jeffreyyoung41044 ай бұрын
Sadly, the magnetic heading for north can be wildly off depending on your location as well, which will throw in more errors.
@madeintexas3d4423 ай бұрын
It is really sad that the people that live in the town do not even know their towns namesake and how important that building was to their town. Thankfully the small town I live in takes historical stuff really important. They're is a road called Potter shop road and for the longest time there was a gazebo that was built and just a big pile of what looks like rocks with the tarp over it. Ends up the guy that own the property had restored a beehive kiln that had been there since the early 1800s. They put up a plaque and everything.
@jerrierimer2673 ай бұрын
It's a shame companies don't make stuff like this anymore😢
@Johnny-jr2lq3 ай бұрын
You can roughly tell the time of day with just your hand. By holding you hand at the base of the sun and counting down hand width till you hit the horizon. Each hand is 1 hour and each finger is 15 minutes.
@jamestharp788019 күн бұрын
The small error in time may be due to the change in magnetic variation since the 1920s. N.Y. current variation is W12degrees 45 minutes. The earths magnetic north changes over time. This is also why runways at airports change their numbers occasionally.
@markgreco19624 ай бұрын
I have the same expanded metal top yard furniture. You have some cool things.
@cclarke64 ай бұрын
Yes, but probably not a good table to use with a compass.
@ChrisStaecker4 ай бұрын
Yes those shots were my first attempts- I quickly realized something was up and did the rest away from the table.
@heatshield4 ай бұрын
The area where the gnomon attaches to the base might be a bit damaged causing some of the inaccuracies. Just a little bend in the metal would move the tip. You might be able to test that at two different times of day with the shadow on both sides of the slot. Let’s say 10am and 2pm. If it’s bent to the left, both measurements should be a bit early. Right, late. If it’s dented down some, left should show late, right early. . . I think.
@edbenelli53744 ай бұрын
Did you know that compass variation changes over time? It’s because the molten iron core in the center of the earth that the magnetic needle is attracted to is liquid, and moves around a little. At New York City it’s no longer 10º; it’s currently 13º.
@ChrisStaecker4 ай бұрын
bro have I got a video for you
@peterkung6793Ай бұрын
Never ever hear there is something called Sunwatch. Thank you.
@ehfik4 ай бұрын
THE ORIGINAL
@gustavgnoettgen4 ай бұрын
instructions
@laurencefinston70364 ай бұрын
Strictly speaking, a gnomon doesn't have to point toward the celestial north pole. Any point between the sun and the plane of the dial will cast a shadow on the latter. For a usable sundial, it has to be within the perimeter of the dial, of course. It's all about projections and intersections of lines with planes and planes with other planes. A point suspended in space cannot be said to "point" in any direction, north or otherwise. Some sundials have a hole in the gnomon and use a point of light instead of a shadow for time-keeping. If I recall correctly, the point of having the gnomon point north is so the shadow of the entire gnomon will correspond with the same hour lines every day of the year. However, I'm a bit rusty on the details and have to review how this works. Another poster brought up the issue of clockwise and counter-clockwise, or widdershins and, er, shins (?), if you prefer. According to my understanding, it doesn't really apply to sundials: From any location on Earth, the celestial sphere appears to rotate from east to west. If I look north, it appears to rotate counterclockwise. If I turn around and face south, it appears to rotate clockwise. If I face due east, it appears to rotate from front to back, over my head, and if I face due west, then from back to front over my head. This doesn't depend on the hemisphere. I found this confusing while working on a couple of recent animations (using technical drawings) on this subject, but that would seem to be the way it works.
@laurencefinston70364 ай бұрын
If the gnomon points directly north (and upward), the shadow of the entire gnomon will be at its thinnest at noon every day of the year, regardless of the declination of the sun. It will just be the thickness of gnomon. At every other time, the shadow of a gnomon will be triangular, assuming a triangular gnomon. I believe that the origin of the hour lines will always be the point of intersection of the line from the tip of gnomon to the celestial north pole with the plane of the face of the dial, regardless of the shape or orientation of the gnomon itself. If the gnomon has some other shape or is oriented differently, the shadow will just be triangular and the minimum width of the shadow will come at the time when it's aligned with the rays of the sun. In the worst case, part of the gnomon may prevent the sun from falling on the tip, rendering the sundial useless for the times when this happens. The sun is so far away that the rays from the sun are very nearly parallel. As a consequence, the vector for the direction of the sun's rays will be the same for any point on Earth. In fact, if we consider the sun to be infinitely far away, then it will be the same for any point at all. The problem is, that the coordinate system used for describing the vector is different, depending on the location. The celestial poles and equator are the same for every point on Earth, but the zenith, nadir and horizon are different for every point on Earth and the zenith and the horizon are the data that we can acquire directly with a reasonable amount of effort. Longitude is a different matter. If we didn't consider the sun to be infinitely far away, it probably wouldn't be possible to calculate the angles and distances for the rays of the sun, because the angles would be very small and the distances very large. If the resulting numbers are even representable at all in a computer or calculator, it would not be possible to calculate with them as a consequence of the way real numbers are represented in a computer. They would not be commensurable.
@itwasrightthere4 ай бұрын
NOAA has a nice 2010 map of the US for magnetic declination.
@ChrisStaecker4 ай бұрын
Very interesting! Better than what I was looking at before- interestingly it shows almost no change in CT where I am across the last century. (Significant changes all around, just not where I am.)
@almightycornholio4484 ай бұрын
@@ChrisStaecker Over here in California, we have about a 5° declination since the 20's. I need to see if I can get my hands on one of these to see how it fares on the west coast. Even with it being off by 10 minutes that's still incredibly impressive.
@geneard6393 ай бұрын
I live in Seymour right up the Naugatuck River and also on CT. Route 8. I know exactly where the Ansonia Copper & Brass Company is. The buildings are blighted but a few companies have been using it for various uses, and the Metro North Waterbury Spur's rails are right on the property edge and the sidings for AC&B are still there and some are used last time I saw. It is being taken down, very slowly, because there is so much lead and asbestos in every bit of it and its a toxic facility requiring special abatement practices. You can go North to Torrington and South to Bridgeport and every town on the Naugatuck has Copper, Brass and Tin shops from the 1800s and tool and die foundries like New Haven Tools and Bridgeport Tools. All along the All American Valley there was industry from Railroad Engines, to Cars, to Aircraft to a multitude of other things... Waterbury is the Brass City and its first industry was making Brass Buttons and Buckles. Name a famous name and it probably got its start in the Valley.
@TheTarrMan4 ай бұрын
FYI : We had reliable portable time telling devices since 1735 when John Harrison invented the chronometer but the first "pocket watch" was invented in 1510 by Peter Henlein. In 1920 the "portable sundial" would've been seen as a educational toy. (I have mixed opinions of the educational toys that we have now.)
@Vaaaaadim4 ай бұрын
I can't believe you've gnomed me old chum
@keshermedia4 ай бұрын
@8:15 they have no respect! 💁🙈🙈🙈 ..... Excellent video. I'm pretty quirky and use things like this because I love old skool tech, so yes, i would definitely use one in public if i had it. I was an amateur prospector years ago and used a compasses and stick sundial for my cartography... luckily no one contracted me to make a map for them as it already took me three hours to set up and map out the Bellingham waterfront (while cheating with a Delorme topo map for backup)! 😝😝😝
@paulgreen90594 ай бұрын
It's neat to think the sundial requires the gnomon to be parallel to the axis of the Earth. I've been looking for a sundial with an adjustable gnomon for years. Do you think Amazon ships from the past?
@rogerharris2313 ай бұрын
Be aware that for this type of horizontal dial, both the angle of the gnomon AND the layout of the hour lines depend on the latitude. (This dial sort of fudges that by having 3 dials, but if you're not on one of those latitudes, it won't quite be accurate.) However, a little known fact is that if a horizontal sundial is properly laid out for a given latitude, you can use it at a different latitude, by simply tilting it north or south until the gnomon is at the angle corresponding to your latitude (i.e. make it parallel to the Earth's axis). Both the gnomon and the dial face will then be parallel with a level dial at the design latitude, so it will show the correct solar time as if it were at that latitude. For example, if you know your dial was designed for 40 N, you can use it at 45 N by just tilting it 5 degrees southward.
@mikevandebunt8114 ай бұрын
Heck yeah! There should definitely be a historical marker.
@ryderphillips44644 ай бұрын
I have one of those, couldn't resist at $10.
@dirtyd79314 ай бұрын
Before GPS how would you know where is the bus at? With this little gem. Great vid.
@herzogsbuick2 ай бұрын
you didn't trespass??? you're a stronger man than i, i woulda been fiddlin' in that buildin' so fast
@andrewhostetler90354 ай бұрын
It seems like a device that would be more practically used to set your mechanical watch by.
@---l---2 ай бұрын
this is neat!
@harrymusgrave21314 ай бұрын
Pretty cool. If you carried a slide ruler also. Could get really accurate?
@unknownrocketeer928918 күн бұрын
dud i lovvve quirky videos like this about stuff i nevr wouldve thought would be cool, but theres something neat about this little pice of history :3
@keyb4 ай бұрын
Honestly it’s pretty impressive. Spend a minute or two to set it up, get the correct time to within about 10-15 minutes no matter where you are in the (continental) u.s.
@earldumarest2344 ай бұрын
I have one of these .... In The Original Box (and with the directions). I believe the company made 5 of them for various places in the world you might happen to be traveling in and need to know the time on a sunny day.
@ChrisStaecker4 ай бұрын
Nice! I didn't know there was an original box. I've heard there was also one for canada and one for australia, but I've never seen photos of those.
@earldumarest2344 ай бұрын
@@ChrisStaecker Will send you a photo
@P_RO_4 ай бұрын
This exact model was heavily promoted to the Boy Scouts of the time so they're not terribly rare. And historically, time has always been referenced to the sun, so these can be quite accurate once you factor in all the variables exactly, which this only does roughly. A bit less than useful on cloudy days and at night, but interesting anyway.
@ar_xiv4 ай бұрын
this channel's urbex era incoming
@StephenRansom474 ай бұрын
😳 Magnetic North MOVES?! but what about the constancy of the solar system? What about the BigG?! What about Laws of The Universe?! 😅 That’s some nifty little gadget you got there. Why do these things have such interesting backstories? I mean, Stalin? WOW !!
@jwr29044 ай бұрын
The Big G wrote the laws and things are acting accordingly lol
@jamiekawabata71014 ай бұрын
I use the Crocodile Dundee method if I'm not in a calculating mood.
@arthurgarthur4 ай бұрын
You need to add one, or two, extra minutes to the Sunwatch time, to compensate for how long it took to do all the mathematical calculations.
@jdmr48154 ай бұрын
Gnomon!
@saiforos79284 ай бұрын
God I wanna be the absolute irredeemable piece of shit that gets asked for the time and pull out this stuff.
@sneakythumbs99004 ай бұрын
I live in the southern hemisphere. Don't get me started on sundials and widdershins
@bertjesklotepinoАй бұрын
"you open this thing up, pull out the gnomon, line it up just right and never miss the bus again" So, i bought one of these on a flea market. And i tried exactly what you said. Just last week. It did not work. I did miss the bus. The gadget did not correct for wintertime.
@NoahSpurrier4 ай бұрын
When I was a kid I had a Casio watch.
@sambrose14 ай бұрын
It's time!
@extol22472 ай бұрын
Internet Archive is down right now 😭
@quentinking43514 ай бұрын
Disney Hercules didn’t lie to us
@bobsfog63393 ай бұрын
That's an amazing story oh how I love to get sucked in on stories about companies and stuff.. I actually have a Poljot watch They're pretty cheap on the market
@MisterMCXVIII16 сағат бұрын
Louisville born and raised…🎯🎯🎯👌🏾😂😂😂
@stephenfreeborn4 ай бұрын
You own three?!?
@ChrisStaecker4 ай бұрын
Accidental collection- I got the wooden one randomly and liked the concept. Then I got the black one because I thought I would like it better, but I didn't really. Then finally got the Ansonia as the ideal form. But they're small and cheap so more the merrier?
@stephenfreeborn4 ай бұрын
I’m always amazed by the things that people own that I’ve never even heard of.
@ChrisStaecker4 ай бұрын
@@stephenfreeborn You of all people! Hah-
@herzogsbuick2 ай бұрын
touchy + pocket = business
@BillRicker4 ай бұрын
I suspect if you used proper modern Declination (aka variation) Variation 13.23° = 13.03°W (WMM2020 magnetic declination) + (4 = 2024-2020) * 0.05° annual change [values for BDR, nearest airport], and for other values took the mean of NYC and HFD values {assuming BDR isn't on the lid}, it'd do even better. You are quite a ways east of the NYC meridian as well as north of Manhattan. The brass case might even be protecting the compass from the ironwork of your deck table - but best practice would have it on wood or other non ferrous surface. Also, if there is a bubble of air in the compass, use that to assure it's perfectly level, or otherwise a small bubble level can verify it's level.
@kemonotaku4 ай бұрын
Actually is probably more accurate than you calculated. Reality is declination changes on a regular basis. So you used the 10 on the "VAR". Current declination for NY is 13 degrees. So recalculating for that might change it more accurately.
@ChrisStaecker4 ай бұрын
watch to the end bro
@TheWinnieston4 ай бұрын
When's the multipication book lollll
@mercoid4 ай бұрын
THAT’S RiiiiiiiGHT!!!!! Okay?!
@keithrosenberg54864 ай бұрын
No link to the instructions. I have one of those and figured out how to use it. I think.
@ChrisStaecker4 ай бұрын
Sorry I forgot to paste in the link- it's in the description now. archive.org/details/ansonia-sunwatch-instructions
@laurencefinston70364 ай бұрын
I just read the instructions and the result can only be rough approximation. To get an accurate result, the true values of latitude and longitude must be used and an accurate time correction must be applied. I haven't checked this, but it appeared that the gnomon can be positioned continuously, i.e., not in steps. The instructions are very terse and don't go into the theory or how to get a more accurate reading. In the northern hemisphere, the gnomon must point to the celestial north pole, where the star Polaris is located. If the sundial was at the north pole, this would be straight up. At Ansonia, Connecticut, 41°20′36″N 73°04′07″W, it would have to be pointed to the north (true north, i.e., magnetic north with the correction for the deviation from true north applied), and angled upward at an angle of 41°20′36″. This is the angle with respect to the plane tangent to the Earth at this location that corresponds with the direction toward the celestial north pole. In the southern hemisphere, you would have to point the gnomon at the celestial south pole and at the equator, well, you're out of luck, at least as far as this method is concerned. The correct longitude, in this case, 73°04′07″W, must be used because otherwise the time values will be off. The sun appears to move from east to west across the sky and culminates at true local solar noon. This is, in fact, the definition of true local solar noon: it's whenever the sun culminates. Since the earth is rotating, it culminates earlier the further east you go, so it will be noon earlier at 70° W and later at 80° W. That is, at a given moment, it's later in the east than in the west. Clearly, to get an accurate time value, the correct longitude must be used. Of course, the surface the sundial is placed on must be level. Sundials can have oblique dials, but this affects the placement of the hour lines. And don't forget to wind it up!
@pankoBreadCroisant3 ай бұрын
cool little gizmo, but not enough knurls
@guillermojacques66714 ай бұрын
Now I have to get one, or make one 🤪
@Flea-FlickerАй бұрын
I used to live in Louisville. After getting teased as a "Yankee" trying to transplant with a funny accent, I learned the easiest way to say it was Lew-uh-VOOL then I was one with them.
@MisterMCXVIII16 сағат бұрын
🎯
@laurencefinston70364 ай бұрын
I am fairly confident this sundial could be set up to get quite accurate results.
@burlapknapsack4 ай бұрын
The fact that Chris knew so much about this topic but indicated he wasn't sure about what an acceptable margin of error for a sundial is made me curious about it. Is 15-20 minutes excellent?
@ChrisStaecker4 ай бұрын
I’d like to know!
@laurencefinston70364 ай бұрын
@@burlapknapsack No, certainly not. A minute would be excellent, in my opinion, and two very good. The first thing to do would be to set it up so that it shows true solar noon and then check whether the hour lines are correct. If not, you can forget it. However, given the general impression of quality of this instrument, I would expect that they would be. The correct values for the latitude and longitude would have to be used and the gnomon would have to be checked and, if necessary, adjusted. After 97 years and presumably decades of use and/or neglect, it may well need adjusting. Of course, the current value of the deviation of magnetic from true north would have to be found and the correction applied. Astronomical yearbooks give the values for true solar noon (culmination of the sun), sunrise and sunset for a few days in every month. Otherwise, they can be calculated. I don't know the equations off-hand or I'd write them here. This is what I'm currently working on. They involve "The Equation of Time" and the "Julian Date" and aren't that difficult (it's just arithmetic).
@BoMwarriorVlog2 ай бұрын
Seriously, why no plaque‽‽ 🤨 Loved the video by the way. 😁