Re: NOMOS ring dial competition

2018-12-18 Thread Ian Maddocks
Hello again
This year, for the first time, they are now giving away one of the gold ring 
dials
Enter the give away here
https://nomos-glashuette.com/en/advent-calendar-day-19
regards
Ian



From: Ian Maddocks
Sent: 10 December 2018 06:58
To: sundial@uni-koeln.de
Subject: NOMOS ring dial competition

Hello Fellow Dialists

For several years the German  watch company NOMOS have had an "Advent Calendar" 
giveaway each day before Christmas.
As in previous years one of the giveaways is one of their ring dials (128 GBP). 
   It's free to enter
You have to enter each daily draw for a chance to win that item so to be in 
with a chance of winning the dial you need to enter TODAY Monday, I presume 
before midnight in Germany tonight

https://nomos-glashuette.com/en/advent-calendar-day-10

Good luck & lets hope it goes to one of our community

Ian Maddocks
Chester, UK
53°11'50"N  2°52'41"W
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Re: Orologi Solari n. 17

2018-12-18 Thread Steve Lelievre

Hello, all,

It is pleasing for me to see that the latest  Orologi Solari includes an 
article by Alessandro Gunella, describing my design for an Italian Hours 
Foster-Lambert dial.


However, I am slightly embarrassed to have to report that the website 
link provided by Mr. Gunella no longer works, as of earlier today.


Due to an unfortunate coincidence, the announcement of the new Orologi 
Solari arrived today, but today is also the day that the website ceased 
to exist. My plan had been to keep this website for a few more weeks and 
to announce the replacement when ready, but I misunderstood the contract 
and the supplier has just closed the old site. The fee to reinstate it 
is not justified.


Instead, I have placed a copy of the relevant page on a new site, at 
http://www.gnomoni.ca


Note, however, that I do not plan to reinstate all of my older sundial 
pages. Anyone looking for my other programs, or bits and pieces from the 
former va7lel.ca website, should contact me off-list.


With apologies for the inconvenience caused.

Steve Lelievre




On 2018-12-18 10:52 a.m., Gian Casalegno wrote:
12. "A horizontal Italic sundial by Foster – Lambert" by  Gunella 
Alessandro
In issue 24 number 2 of the NASS magazine "The Compendium" an 
interesting sundial proposed by Steve Lelievre, a Canadian gnomonist 
from Vancouver, showed off on the cover. This is an interactive 
horizontal Italic sundial of the Foster Lambert type. In this article 
an analysis of the author, using the usual graphical method, is exposed.




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Orologi Solari n. 17

2018-12-18 Thread Gian Casalegno
Dear friends,
a new issue of the Italian magazine Orologi Solari is available for
download from the usual site http://www.orologisolari.eu/.
It's a special issue dedicated to our gnomonist friend Alessandro Gunella.

Here is the list of articles together with a short abstract:

1. "Curriculum vitae (self-produced)" by Gunella Alessandro

2."Note on the book by Giuseppe Sacchi  - Pavia 1846"
 by   Gunella
Alessandro
In this article the author takes the opportunity from the recommendation of the
book by Giuseppe Sacchi to discuss the problem of the "three points". This
problem has been faced over the centuries by many experts in the
sector, starting
from Vitruvius to Zarbula and passing through Igino Gromatico, Al Biruni,
Nuñes, Clavio, Kircher, Grienberger, Oddi, Ozanam, Desargues, Guarini, De
la Hire, Mahistre.

3. "Stefano Di Giovanni: an author from the 19th century who plays with the
Italic Hours"  by   Gunella Alessandro
The study of Italian sundials in the nineteenth century benefited from
a considerable
theoretical research, although as a matter of fact (or maybe because) this
kind of dials was no longer in use. In 1843, Father Stefano Di Giovanni
publishes a theoretical study with which he identifies new criteria for
tracing Italic sundials on horizontal planes. He also proposes the use
of a particular
hour line, which he calls "Verticale Italico", for the correct regulation
of mechanical clocks and he finally identifies a particular mathematical
curve which he calls "Orizzontoide".

4. "A small techique by Clavio not to "  by  Gunella
Alessandro
The article is inspired by a 24-page booklet "Compendium brevissimum
describendorum
Horologiorum ..." written by Clavius in 1603. When you build a
non-declining (or horizontal) sundial with the classic graphical method,
sometimes the more distant lines from noon (like the lines of the hours 8
and 7 o'clock in the morning, or the correspondents in the afternoon) have
very distant references on the Equinoxial line. Clavius in his
handbook indicates
a method to remedy this problem. The author of this article explains the
geometric reasons why this method works.

5. "The declination of the Sun in a day of  hours"  by   Gunella
Alessandro
It is here proposed to look for the declination of the parallel covered by
the Sun on a day when the hours of light are "n", and the night is 24-n
hours, in a place where Latitude is given, by means of a graphical method.
The solution is based on the sixteenth-century text by G. B. Benedetti.

6. "Notes about Italic sundials"  by   Gunella Alessandro
The article is a summary, very partial of topics concerning the Italic
hours, debated here and there in texts from the 16th and 17th centuries.

7- "The extreme points of the Italic hours"  by   Gunella Alessandro
The author, inspired by the "usual" book "De gnomonum umbrarumque ..."
published in 1573 by G. B. Benedetti, explains in this article how to find
the extreme points of the Italic lines without using the solstice curves built
for equal hours sundials.

8. "Apianus and the graphical solution for spherical triangles"  by   Gunella
Alessandro
The solution of spherical triangles is here debated with a graphical
method starting
from what Apianus explained in 1540 in his book "Astronomicum Caesareum",
using a universal astrolabe called " Arzaquiel's Scaphea"

9. "A bifilar sundials with two catenaries solved graphically" by Gunella
Alessandro
In this article the author "challenges" vector algebra. A graphical
solution is presented for the construction of a bifilar sundial with wires
arranged as catenaries.

10. "The Gnomonic Transformation"  by   Gunella Alessandro
In this article the author is inspired by a Gnudi's text from 1700 entitled "La
Tramutazione Gnomonica" or the method to build any vertical declining
sundial starting from a horizontal sundial. The method here described is a
reworked version by the author.

11. "Exactly the same: a predecessor of the Vinaccia diagram"  by   Gunella
Alessandro
The Vinaccia diagram was discussed by Gunella in n. 13 of this magazine. "The
Analemma and the Universal Compass" was the title of the article. But
already in the work by Father Egidi "Un Orologio Solare Universale" published
in Rome in 1881 and so preceding Vinaccia publication, a method is shown to
find local time for any latitude: a first step towards Vinaccia diagram.
This method is here briefly illustrated.

12. "A horizontal Italic sundial by Foster – Lambert"  by   Gunella
Alessandro
In issue 24 number 2 of the NASS magazine "The Compendium" an interesting
sundial proposed by Steve Lelievre, a Canadian gnomonist from Vancouver,
showed off on the cover. This is an interactive horizontal Italic sundial
of the Foster Lambert type. In this article an analysis of the author, using
the usual graphical method, is exposed.

A digital bonus can also be downloaded for additional reference material.

Hope you will enjoy the reading, although in Italian only.

Ciao.
Gian Casalegno