In answer to your question about the Whitehead dial of 1688 the shadow pin is missing but it must have been a round metal bar, doubtless of the same material as the dial, bronze and not a plumb-bob. The holes to receive this pin are obvious and at the cardinal, intercardinal and three letter points there are double lines on the dial plate to receive the thickness of the shadow pin. I am hoping to make a second visit to the dial fairly soon.

The description held in BSS records and carefully written, presumably by Robert Sylvester reads:

Octagonal dial of 45 cm. showing time from 4am to 8pm in half, quarter and eighth hours on scales inside the chapter ring and in minutes (with Arabic nos.) on outer edge. Strangely some of the actual hour lines on these inner scales seem missing [e.g. 6 and 7pm]. Inward (arrow with H form) and outward (line and dot form) half hour markers. Elaborate inner 32 point compass with all points named [e.g. SEbE] and on an adjacent (outer) scale with its reciprocal [e.g. NWbW] so as to give the sun's bearing. Compass designed to be used with vertical rod (not present) passed through holes in the gnomon and centred on the compass. Markers on either side of the main 32 points indicate the width of this shadow for accurate centring. Two scales further divide each of the 32 points into 1/4 and 1/8 intervals. A half division is provided outside these scales (to the inside of the dial) and marked by an inward line with a three dot arrowhead. Wonderful pierced gnomon with scroll pattern, the whole mounted on an excellent panelled octagonal stone pedestal which is slightly fluted and with no visible base. Design: Lat. 54deg 40'N.

Dear Frank,
 
I was intrigued by the description of the Richard Whitehead dial in the
BSS Register so I'm glad that you are investigating it.  Whitehead was
apprenticed to my hero Henry Wynne, who's large double horizontal dials
feature azimuth scales.  The one at Wrest Park (Bedfordshire) has an
azimuth scale divided down to one-eighth points, as well as to quarter
degrees. The points are labelled, for example, SWbS. Slightly later dials
of similar size (about 750mm diameter) by Wynne seem to make do with
quarter points and half degrees.  Most of the other information on the
dials is astronomical, rather than nautical.
 
By coincidence, I am currently designing a dial for an Americal client
which will include a central pin to show the azimuth of the sun, particularly
at sunrise/sunset.  In this case, the gnomon will be of the cantelevered or
underslung type where the shadow is cast by the bottom edge of the
gnomon.  This leaves the centre of the dialplate clear for the scales.
 
I would be interested to see how Whitehead arranged his shadow pin for
the azimuth scale.  Do you think it was an actual pin rather than a
plumb-bob or plummet?
 
Regards,
 
John

Frank 55N 1W
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Frank Evans
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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