Hello All,

Some of you wrote me and seemed very confused with my inquiry about a way to
get a EOT table that is longitude corrected.  You ot understand what I
wanted.  So I'll try to explain it here. (thanks to everybody who sent me
info on this)

Sample letter:
"I still cannot figure out your EoT problem; EoT does not depend on
longitude, it depends on an agreed absolute (GMT) and changes so little in
any time zone you cannot see the difference on a dial.  Maybe I am missing
something, I often do these days."

Yes, you are missing something.  And it's so simple you will kick yourself.
You're thinking too deeply!  I'll try to explain...

Of course you are correct in implying that EOT values are "Universal" and
are basically the same all over the world, at any longitude or latitude and
on any given date. You can use the same EOT graph with almost any sundial
anywhere in the world. But you know that already.  So far so good.

But if somebody really wants to know "clock" time, then not only does he
have to correct his sundial readings for EOT, but he also has to correct for
his longitude (and Daylight Saving Time if applicable).  This additional
longitude correction is expressed as a plus or minus value in minutes and
seconds.  But you know this already.  So far so good.

Now this double correction is sometimes confusing to non-dialists (it's a
triple correction if one has to correct for Daylight Savings too).  So to
reduce two time reading corrections into just one correction, you can add
the EOT correction to the longitude correction since both expressed in
minutes and seconds, and you come up with a new EOT graph or table that
incorporates the longitude time correction in its values.

Now do you get it?  Neat huh!

For my sundial customers, I usually build the longitude correction directly
into my sundial faces so the customer doesn't have to do the longitude
correction, just the EOT correction.  This combined EOT+Longitude Correction
Table is very useful if you have an antique pre-timezone sundial or any
sundial that doesn't have a built-in longitude correction.  The downside is
that you have to make a unique customized EOT table for each sundial,
depending on its particular longitude.

Hope this helps




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