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#1 |
Helmsman
![]() Join Date: May 2006
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there was a great formula i used by donreed1, it had numbers 3600 and 1824? Anyway it was very accurate and does anyone no where to find this formula? Thanks
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#2 |
Ocean Warrior
![]() Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Canada, eh?
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I'm not sure, but 1824 sounds a lot like the number of meters per nautical mile, which is 1852m. This means that 1 knot will cover 1852 m in an hour. Any equation that includes this number basically caclulates a conversion between meters and nautical miles/knots.
I have a few calculations I use for measuring knots based on distance travelled over a measured time. One of them is: 1.943 x meters per second=knots or 0.032 x meters per minute=knots Use this conversion after plotting target position, starting a stop watch then plotting target position again after a certain time period and measuring the distance he covered in that time period and plugging that into the formula. If you measure a target having travelled 800m in 5 minutes the formula would be: 0.032 x 160 = 5.12 knots You get 160 by dividing 800 by 5 - the number of meters per minute. This obviously requires having a calculator. Thats how I do it though obviously its not very realistic since they didnt have a calculator like I use, though someone doing some basic math on paper would be perfectly fine if not a bit longer to do. This is somethign I do because I don't like being tied to the 3 minute 15 seconds rule. It means I can do it in minutes or even seconds, so I can do a fast and dirty speed calculation in 40 seconds if I want or if I miss my 3:15 mark I can just carry on to 4 minutes and be just as accurate. There are formulas that are simpler to do in your head, which might be what you're looking for, but I never ran into them I guess. I'm always looking for new ways to figure these things out though, so I hope someone has what you're looking for. Just thought I'd throw mine in there too. ![]() |
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#3 |
Helmsman
![]() Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 110
Downloads: 498
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thanks for the reply
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