Dear Maciej, John and Steve

Congratulations on coming up with several
ideas.  I should have asked your advice
several months ago!

Although your ideas seem wildly different,
they all share elements of the actual design
which I shall reveal in due course.

Maciej: I am most grateful to you for drawing
my attention to the Hans Troschel diptych dial.
I didn't know of this before and its design is
certainly (almost) confined by the noon gap.
This is getting very close to my thoughts.

John: you ask...

> Could you be designing a vertical dial for
> an interior south facing wall with a 'Velux'
> type window (or any rectangular glassed-in
> section) in the sloping ceiling above?

This is less like my design but, although on
a different scale, it has features in common
with the Hans Troschel dial so it, too, is
on the right lines.

> Alternatively could one use an unsupported
> sloping porch roof as an underslung gnomon...

That would certainly work but I suspect there
would be a temptation to include markings
outside the gnomon gap.

> But it would not be very weatherproof with
> no sides to the roof!

Well, let's call it a sloping sun-shade such
as was once common on shop fronts in summer.
You could decorate the shop front with the
dial markings.  In British latitudes the shade
would be very steeply sloping.  The idea would
be fine in sub-tropical latitudes which have
more need of shade!

Steve: I must study your arrangement in more
detail but, at first reading, you have a good
scheme which again shares elements of the
design I came up with!  You will certainly 
be surprised when you see the space that I
had to deal with :-)

I might just add that my design can be
implemented for a total outlay of no more
than one US dime!  Not all sundials are
mega-expensive!!

More in due course!

Frank

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

Reply via email to