TerryC
Gold Member
- Joined
- Jun 26, 2008
- Messages
- 7,805
- Reaction score
- 11,218
- Golden Thread
- 0
- Location
- Yarnell, AZ
- Detector(s) used
- Ace 250 (2), Ace 300, Gold Bug 2, Tesoro Cortes, Garrett Sea Hunter, Whites TDI SL SE, Fisher Impulse 8, Minelab Monster 1000, Minelab CTX3030, Falcon MD20, Garrett Pro-pointer, Calvin Bunker digger.
- Primary Interest:
- Metal Detecting
- #1
Thread Owner
On ALL topo maps, on the bottom margin, is a declination value for the area on the map. More correctly, for the center of that topo. The declination value is the difference between true north and magnetic north.On the west coast it can be 17 degrees or more. Your life, or safety, may depend someday on knowing how to figure the difference where you are. Today's Navy STILL learns how to use a sextant to backup today's electronic navigation systems, although compass stearage, I believe, has officially been retired. To figure the declination where you are, using only your GPS is easy. Plug in a "go to" formula. Record the "magnetic" value for the "go to" bearing. Then change the "go to" value to the "true" bearing value. The difference is the declination where you are. If you put a piece of masking tape on the back of your unit, you will have a handy place to note the value. If you change your location, change the tape. Lastly, NOTHING replaces the safety and security of knowing how to use the "old fashioned" magnetic compass. TTC