thank you Willy and Fred for your notes,

I know an analemmatic sundial may have sophisticated versions to show mean 
time, Fred your article is exhaustive, but I think it isn't the better kind of 
sundial to give this info and to get a precison time (position on the heels or 
on the middle of the feet, how vertical is the hand rising above the head, 
estimation of the direction of the shadow, graduations of the minutes, etc). 
Conversely it is a very powerful instrument to involve people with gnomonics.

Anyway I think a simple analemma on the meridian line, without explain its huge 
limits, is not an option, it is an error.

thank you, ciao, Fabio

Fabio Savian



Inviato da Tablet Samsung.


-------- Messaggio originale --------
Da: Fred Sawyer <[email protected]> 
Data: 16/08/2016  20:37  (GMT+02:00) 
A: "fabio.savian" <[email protected]> 
Cc: Sundial Group <[email protected]> 
Oggetto: Re: Double analemma dials 

Hi Fabio

This use of an analemma design on the analemmatic dial has been a confusing 
error that goes back at least to the early 20th century introduction of the 
curve on the dial in Brou, France.  The use of a double analemma design with 
curves calculated to limit error to just a few minutes throughout the year goes 
back at least to 1970 and the work of Ken Seidelman at Longwood Gardens in 
Pennsylvania.  For a detailed discussion with equations, etc. see my article 
"Of Analemmas, Mean Time and the Analemmatic Sundial" that you can download at 
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/4837615/scia7.pdf  Brian Albinson has taken 
this idea to heart and, using a slightly different approach to the equations, 
has designed several such dials in the Vancouver area.

Fred Sawyer

On Tue, Aug 16, 2016 at 12:23 PM, fabio.savian <[email protected]> 
wrote:

hi all,

I draw inspiration from the image sent by Brian Albison for a meditation.

I often found analemmatic sundials with the analemma. Has it a sense ?

Standing on the analemma one can get the right correction for eot only at noon.
Most of these sundials don't report a warning about it, so the users get a 
wrong time al the day, except noon.
Moreover some of them haven't the calendar on the meridian line but only on the 
analemma, so the misunderstanding is sure.

The use of a table with the eot should solve the curiosity to get the mean 
time, so I wonder why this kind of sundial is knowspreading with the analemma 
while it is not suitable for this.
Do you  where this use come from ?

ciao Fabio

Fabio Savian

Inviato da Tablet Samsung.


































-------- Messaggio originale --------
Da: Brian Albinson <[email protected]> 
Data: 16/08/2016 18:04 (GMT+02:00) 
A: Sundial Group <[email protected]> 
Oggetto: Double analemma dials 

Hi folk

We have built 3 direct reading mean time double analemma dials, 
(including the Highlands School dial) in the Vancouver area and are 
curious to know if any others exist in the world (apart from the 
Longwood dial).

Brian Albinson

Len Berggren

Vancouver, Canada


---------------------------------------------------
https://lists.uni-koeln.de/mailman/listinfo/sundial


---------------------------------------------------
https://lists.uni-koeln.de/mailman/listinfo/sundial



---------------------------------------------------
https://lists.uni-koeln.de/mailman/listinfo/sundial

Reply via email to