MarkB_MI
Well-known Member
- Location
- Motown USA
I've always wanted to own a sextant. Not because I actually need one; I just thought it would be a cool thing to have. Last week that thought came back when I decided our Florida condo really needs a sextant hanging on the wall. So I started shopping, and it turns out you can buy all sorts of sextants on eBay.
There are plenty of fake brass sextants for less than fifty bucks. In fact, even Harbor Freight sold them at one time. But they're clearly fakes and I wanted something that at least looks real. Now all the real sextants cost several hundred or even several thousand dollars. But for $110 bucks I bought this aluminum sextant, shipping included. At first glance it looks like the real thing, but of course on closer inspection it's clearly a fake. I'm quite certain it was not made by the Tamaya company, and it certainly wasn't made in Japan. It was probably made in India, since it was shipped FedEx from Bangalore.
A few things about it I'll note: The handle is marked "SEXTANT" in large letters, which helps me distinguish it from other sextant-shaped objects in my junk drawer. On the front side it says "Tamaya Sextant", even though real six thousand dollar Tamaya sextants just say "Tamaya". It has a micrometer just like a real Tamaya sextant, so it should be accurate down to a minute of angle. (Every yachtsman knows that a minute of latitude is exactly equal to one nautical mile.) However, it lacks the vernier scale necessary to get down to a tenth of a minute (i.e. a tenth of a NM). There are a number of filters which are used to shoot the sun. Will they keep you from going blind? Who knows. (Back in the days, navy navigators were all blind in one eye from shooting the sun.) One of these days I'll take it out and give it a try.
The last pic shows the sextant hanging on the wall of our condo.
There are plenty of fake brass sextants for less than fifty bucks. In fact, even Harbor Freight sold them at one time. But they're clearly fakes and I wanted something that at least looks real. Now all the real sextants cost several hundred or even several thousand dollars. But for $110 bucks I bought this aluminum sextant, shipping included. At first glance it looks like the real thing, but of course on closer inspection it's clearly a fake. I'm quite certain it was not made by the Tamaya company, and it certainly wasn't made in Japan. It was probably made in India, since it was shipped FedEx from Bangalore.
A few things about it I'll note: The handle is marked "SEXTANT" in large letters, which helps me distinguish it from other sextant-shaped objects in my junk drawer. On the front side it says "Tamaya Sextant", even though real six thousand dollar Tamaya sextants just say "Tamaya". It has a micrometer just like a real Tamaya sextant, so it should be accurate down to a minute of angle. (Every yachtsman knows that a minute of latitude is exactly equal to one nautical mile.) However, it lacks the vernier scale necessary to get down to a tenth of a minute (i.e. a tenth of a NM). There are a number of filters which are used to shoot the sun. Will they keep you from going blind? Who knows. (Back in the days, navy navigators were all blind in one eye from shooting the sun.) One of these days I'll take it out and give it a try.
The last pic shows the sextant hanging on the wall of our condo.