Hi David,
I don't know anything about the Hunt problems but when I clicked
the link that you provided to his site, I see the first glaring error
that is made in many of these dials...I believe.  Shouldn't there be
just a single line that you straddle.  His picture shows a person
very much standing to one side and implying that you would stand
on the other side during the opposite half of the year.
Fritz

-----Original Message----- From: David Andersson Sent: Wednesday, August 17, 2016 3:30 PM To: Sundial Mailing List Subject: Re: Re: Double analemma dials
In message <[email protected]>
         "fabio.savian" <[email protected]> wrote:


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



As far as Analemmatic sundials are concerned, surely the person who
can be thanked for making these interactive features so popular all
over the world must be Douglas Hunt of "Modern Sunclocks" in the UK
who is responsible for these being installed in thousands of school
playgrounds - plus famous Stately Homes and even the "Space Shuttle
Memorial" (at Racine, Wisconsin), and his 'Human Sundials' are even
mentioned within school-books due to the many educational benefits.

I do not think that he subscribes to this Mailing List (having been
'chased away' many years ago, by people who were jealous of his own
international success) - but I seem to remember some discussions on
this List around 2 years ago, when Frank King (Chairman of "British
Sundial Society") said that it was an excellent design due to self-
adjusting to/from Daylight-Saving and coping with shadow lengths at
different times of year in a better way than 'traditional' layouts.

His website (www.sunclocks.com), even has a link to Brian Albinson.


Doug's design does NOT use any Analemma, which is as this should be
because (in my personal opinion) it would only 'confuse' the people
who simply want to see their shadow indicating clock time (agreeing
with their wrist-watch) - plus is maybe why "Sunclocks" have become
so popular within public areas, compared with the more conventional
sundials which could be costly as well as subject to theft/vandals.

At the risk of having 'brickbats' thrown at me, I must explain that
I have no "axe to grind" here - but I do think that Doug Hunt could
be acknowledged for the services he has given to advancing both the
popularity and understanding of sundials (of all types), especially
with school-children who will become our 'Diallists of the future".


Sincerely,

Dave Andersson.


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