Lensatic compasses?

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philaw

Settler
Nov 27, 2004
571
47
44
Hull, East Yorkshire, UK.
I've got a lensatic sighting compass that I bought when I was learning to sail, and now I want to use it for land navigation.

Could I get by with that and simple things like a ruler and protractor? Is it a good choice?

Some help in stubbornly resisting the urge to buy more kit would be very welcome. :) The array of compasses is simply bewildering, and it's not clear to me which features are optional, and which you will eventually need. There's a lot of scope to keep buying them and go through the baseplate and towards the mirrored sighting compases and spend a fortune in the process.

Cheers,

Phil
 
for taking bearings a prismatic sighting compas can't be beat! - if it's the marine type i'm thinking of you have a great bit of kit and use it!!!!

however taking the bearing to the map is niegh on impossible but getting a cheap silva type baseplete is the way forward i reccon

as great as a sighting compass is - with good technique a std silva compas is fine for land navigation
 
I’ve always used a Second World War marching compass (ex service) with mirrored sighting and needle lock together with a romer specific to the map I’m using at the time. The needle lock makes transferring bearings to a map dead easy. I know a lot of people are comfortable with baseplate models but in the cold and rain I’d probably use the wrong scale, not to mention I am expert at breaking anything plastic when I’m walking!

One option you have is to try your existing compass with a romer in an area you are familiar with and see how you get on.

Good luck.
 
Thanks for the replies, fellas.

The one I have lacks any kind of baseplate or needle lock, and it's a little tricky to take a sighting, but it's fluid damped and very smooth. I don't know the brand, but it's made in Japan, so ought be reasonable quality-wise. There's always better kit to be had, but I prefer to make do sometimes because it winds me up how kit always finds a way to take over.

My heros are people like the old american lady that did the pacific trail a couple of times in the US, using a shower curtain as a tarp, and called all the people on the trail with fancy kit "sissies", and the Russian guy that sailed a little boat around the world with nothing more elaborate than coke bottles full of tap water.
 

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