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SelkieDVM:Why does my dive compass (as well as a few others I've noticed) have north set at 180 degrees...
Whether this is a real post or not, I will respond, because that's what I asked my OW instructor when I got certified and he couldn't respond. This question has also come up in several classes that I have DMed.
If you're familiar with land navigation as with hiking and camping or in my case the Army, you may be used to compasses that have the needle mounted on a disk that has the various degree headings.
On this type of scuba compass, you do not read the degree numbers on the disk from the top. The numbers on the disk are for reading only through the window on the back. So, if you're headed towards 0 degrees, the disk will read 180 on the top, but 0 from the back. In other words, all the numbers read from above at the front will be opposite from those read from the back.
You use the top part of the compass by setting your heading with the numbers on the bezel and turning the direction you are facing until the 0 mark lines up with the North mark not the 0 on the disk.
To simplify things, I just tell the students to look through the back window and forget using the top degree markings until they take AOW.
Just curious...
Why does my dive compass (as well as a few others I've noticed) have north set at 180 degrees rather than zero like the ones I've used for hiking and sailing?
Just curious...
Why does my dive compass (as well as a few others I've noticed) have north set at 180 degrees rather than zero like the ones I've used for hiking and sailing?