Dear Dialists,

The city of Ghent (Belgium) plans to place 4 sundials on one
of the chimneys of the town hall. The tabels of the dials
will be squares, with sides 1.5m. They will be placed about 35m 
above the ground.

For what I've seen on the current plans (which are 20 years old by the
way), the dials will be open frames, constructed from gilded brass, to
be bolted to the stone walls of the chimney. So the table of the dials
will be the walls of the chimney, and the hour lines, etc... will be
made from gilded brass rods. These rods will be 2 cm wide, and 1 cm
thick. The square frame itself will have rods that are 3 cm wide (and
of course also 1 cm thick)

I am a little bit concerned about the thickness of the rods. Some of
the hourlines get fairly close together, and if the sun is not too
high above the table, these rods will cast shadows which may interfere
with the proper reading of the dial. Also, it may be necessary to
fix the frame at some distance from the wall, which would make the problem
even worse.

Of course, I understand why the architect designed these dials in this
way: they must be absolutely whether-proof, because once installed
(scaffolding necessary of course), there is no question to maintain
them periodically, which is simply impossible.  So you need something
which is sturdy and whether-proof for tens of years, and gilded rods
probably do qualify.

Another disadvantage of the current design is that there is no colour
used, which would be nice if one were to include lines referring to
the seasons, analemmatic lines etc...

Therefore, I am wondering whether there are no other solutions, using
a full flat table, without rods which may cast shadows.  Flat full
tables also provide more possibilities for decoration, while the brass
rods are presumably a bit `hefty'.  The dials should be absolutely
whether-proof, of course, and if possible based on a technique that may
accomodate colours. 

The issue is, I feel, not completely unimportant, because, if the
plans do really materialize (which remains to be seen), many tourists
will see the dials, so one may want to do a good job at it.

Thanks in advance for your reactions,

Herwig Dejonghe

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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