01-31-2017, 12:55 AM
(This post was last modified: 01-31-2017, 01:13 AM by Roger Hunter.)
(01-30-2017, 03:59 PM)Duffy Wrote:(01-30-2017, 01:09 PM)Roger Hunter Wrote:(01-30-2017, 12:32 PM)Duffy Wrote: Roger;
There were 12 data lines in total, I posted 2 more on the 24th and 25th Jan.
He was known as E.D.G. ... you told me about him 2 years ago.
I suggest we run the test again when I have accumulated more data.
Duffy
This wasn't a test of your method, it was a test of my location program.
>> Oh! Okay ... sounds a bit miss-leading after your last post, but I don't know about programs
How do you determine sun/moon locations?
>> http://www.fourmilab.ch/cgi-bin/earth
Duffy
Bad link and search didn't help.
Backing up a bit.
>> a) I get a signal
Ok
>> b) I look at my clock to see what time the signal arrived
Ok
>> c) I check on my planetary program to see where the sun and moon are, at the time it says on my clock
Do you mean where sun and moon are directly overhead at that time?
>> d) I wait until this has happened several times, and note the time and sun and moon position on each occasion
Ok
>> e) I sign on here, and type the days, times and sun / moon positions in a table format and press send
Ok
>> f) I place crosses on my map to represent positions of the sun and moon, at the times the clock showed
So that's a yes on point c), right?
>> g) I wait for a 5+ quake to happen, and check if sunrise/sunset lands on one of my crosses at the time the quake happened
That's gotta be tedious, plugging it into an app, one at a time.
Roger