MAGAZÍN D'INVESTGACIÓ PERIODÍSTICA (iniciat el 1960 com AUCA satírica.. per M.Capdevila a classe de F.E.N.)
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10-06-2014 (1592 lectures) | Categoria: Porto |
I`m in search for hard data on the error of maritime dead reckoning (DR) navigation. Any ship but preferred sails and from older times even better. This data is of special importance for the history of portolan charts. (See The Problem of the Portolan Charts for more information.) This maritime charts from the Middle Ages have an accuracy of 1Â % or better and are thought to be created by DR navigation. Unfortunately DR data I found so far indicate an average error for sails at least in the 20 to 30Â % range.
The Sources:
1. The DR system on a modern motorship around 1985 (gyro compass, electric logg and integrator) had a 5Â % error. [1]
2. The physicist and astronomer R.R. Newton considered for classical times a 25Â % error for sailing distance estimates as a good result.[2]
3. A Royal Navy fleet under Commodore Anson in 1741 had at least 40 % average error in distance and at least +-16.6° average error in heading.
On 7th of March 1741 a British fleet under Commodore Anson passed Straits le Maire and began to sail in mostly poor weather around Cape Horn. Towards end of March they thought to be 10° west of Cape Noir, well into the Pacific. According Anson this 10° was
They thought save enough west to begin a northward course to warmer climate. But on 14th April:
So instead of 10° west they almost hit ground near Cape Noir. Instead of 20° they only hade made 10° longitude since 7th of March. So within about 23 days of mostly bad weather they had an longitude error of 100 %.
By luck their last storm day was 7th April. After the land sight they sailed south-west until they reached 60° S around 22nd April. Anson wrote about the weather this period:
In 1953 Royal Navy Commander W. E. May, from the National Maritime Museum, published a paper "Navigational Accuracy in the Eighteenth Century". He investigated the navigational log books of Ansons fleet during this period of "favourable weather" from 9th to the 20th April 1741.[4]
He had the logs of noon positions of about 7 persons on 3 ships. They all differed such considerably in longitude that he put them on same longitude for 13th April. May: "For the sake of convenience the longitudes have been adjusted so that they all agree on 13 April." About half positions were with latitude measurement. But: "The spread in observed latitudes will be noted. [May used a big circle for this positions in his diagram] On 16 April, for example, Lieutenant Foley and the master disagreed by as much as 29 miles." What is almost half a degree.
May wanted to track the course of the fleet, but: "It was then realized that even among the officers of a single ship there might be considerable differences of opinion as to the observed latitude and the course and distance made good;"
So he published a plot of each persons log book but bunched those on the same ship together. He gave no absolute longitudes in his diagram because the ships were much closer together than the diagram may suggest.[5]
I first digitized the diagram of May and calculated the "Mean", the average course of the fleet. This is the upper part of my diagram. Then I calculated the deviations of each persons daily distance and course estimate to "Mean". What is below in my diagram. Its like unfolding the tracks, Next the deviations are considered as errors and a statistic plot for distance an course heading is given.
The average error in distance was about 40 %. The average error in course was about +- 16.6°. What does this tell? We don't know the real position of the fleet except around 13th April. So this does not give us the error of dead reckoning navigation of Ansons fleet. But it is the smallest error to expect from dead reckoning navigation under good to fair weather conditions in 1741. May concluded his paper: "Navigation in those days was not at all an exact science."
The course error of +-16.6° may need some explanation. This is not the error of the helmsman, that has still to be added. It is mainly the different estimate of the ships real course. The real course of a sail ship is not the direction of its bow but some angle between bow line and wind, the leeway. It depends on the direction of the wind relative to the ship, the aerodynamic and hydrodynamic shape of the ship and how loaded it is. The main way to measure it is to observe the angle of the waves behind the ship. That is not much accurate and worse at low speed and in bad weather or at night.
Anson and his navigators were well aware how crucial navigation accuracy was for their survival. They were members of the most advanced navy of its time and about the last generation before the invention of the marine chronometer. In 1761 Harrison submitted his H4 chronometer to the Board of Longitude. In the middle ages around 1300, were the first portolan charts appeared, there were no logs, no latitude measurement and only a crude compass. The navigational accuracy then had to be considerable worse than in 1741.
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