Glanceblamm brought the shifting magnetic north to my attention a couple weeks ago regarding its impact on navigation. I have done a little investigation of the subject regarding land navigation. I have pulled out USGS Topo Maps going back to 1949 from my collection to find the Variation, or Magnetic North.
I referred to
http://www.airnav.com/ for airport information regarding Variation/Magnetic North(MN). You can go to it by State and find your nearest airport and look up the current posted Variation. For example the Anniston, AL Metropolitan Airport Variation has not been updated for years but it currently shows 01W in 1990. It would be interesting to hear from a member in that area with the current MN as shown on a GPS, Garmin or otherwise.
I did a little research and Garmin updates the MN in their gps units, it is unknown if other manufactures do the same. So I have been stumbling around the woods with my GPS not realizing that MN has shifted over three degrees in the Western U.S. and more in the Eastern U.S. Apparently the shift has made the news because of changes being made in the signing at Tampa Bay International.
In my early retirement years I was setting up emergency helicopter control tower s at airports around the country. The weather instruments had to be orientated to the North, and the windows were temporarily labeled for the controllers.
I was first introduced to the Garmin eTrex at the Forest Service dirt airstrip near Atlanta Idaho years ago. The area was smoked in so getting a reading off the afternoon sun was impossible because visibility was about 100 yards. I have to admit to being a little turned around, and I did not trust my compass because magnetic North was set at 19˚E which was the average used in Northern Siskiyou County based on older USGS Quad Sheets.
In those days I had not heard of the Air Nav website, and even if I had, I did not have access to the internet on the fire I was dispatched from.
One of the important aspects of the trailer package was the weather station. It was important the anemometer and weathervane were orientated to the North. Critical fire weather information was relayed from this location to NOAA Fire Weather in Boise, Idaho. Current weather reports might prevent the entrapment of fire fighters. I asked some of the crewmembers if anybody had a local compass/map. Nope, they were from Arizona. A Helitack member pulled a Garmin eTrex out of her bag and gave me the MN for the location we were at.
In a day or so a Fire Weather Forecaster from Boise appeared on the scene. Her job was to prepare fire weather forecast which were part of the morning and afternoon briefing. She showed up with a truck load of equipment and quickly scrutinized my setup. Like me, on arrival she thought North was in a different direction, but after checking her compass and the data my instruments were putting out, she did not set up her gear and took data from my equipment. She had one item I did not, weather balloons.
Note how the MN is the same in N. California and Idaho.
http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/geomag/img/us_dec_8x11.pdfBut as a hunter out in the woods I have never had to be down to the exact degree. I have two compasses at my computer, the Sylva Ranger, and a similar Brunton. The value of the marks on both for setting MN/Variation is 2-degrees. The Sylva Ranger can be fine tuned a little more than the Brunton but for general use it makes little difference. I keep one in the pickup and the other in my daypack. I also have a lower priced Sylva Base plate compass in my Go Pack.
Question? Can a GPS be adjusted to use True North.
Answer. Yes. In general when using a Garmin GPS go to MAIN MENU>SETTINGS>HEADINGS>NORTH REFRENCE>THE USER CAN SELECT THE FOLLOWING TRUE, MAGNETIC,GRID, OR USER.
If I had a hand drawn map from the 1940 period for a gold find with notes and bearings for magnetic north I would look for a USGS Topo for that area and period and select the USER option and that opens the Magnetic Variation box allowing me to enter the old Magnetic Variation. When the Magnetic Variation box opens you get a pop up with a number board from which you select the numbers you need.
The nice thing about a compass is they do not need a battery. But they do not provide the user with the different categories of information a GPS does. Depending on the topography of the country you are in, the landmarks maybe different. I am from the mountains and I start looking for the sun and mountain tops along with other landmarks to guide me in the outdoors. Put me in the city and I might never get out. Admittedly since purchasing my first gps I have made very little use of a compass.
Recent research in Siskiyou County with a Garmin GPS using the function that displays Magnetic North shows there has been (approximately) a three degree s change in Siskiyou County using USGS Quad sheets from 1954 and 1955. During that period MN was shown at 19˚. Currently the Garmin displays 16˚E.
Last week a friend went around to the following airports in Siskiyou County with his Garmin GPS and recorded the magnetic north as shown on his unit. The Variation shown for the airports was taken from the Air Nav website. The friend’s earlier USGS quad sheets show a 19 1/2˚ MN.
Siskiyou County Airport
Variation: 19E (1975)
Garmin 2011 16E
Montague Airport-Yreka Rohrer Field
Variation: 18E (1985)
Garmin 2011 16E
Weed Airport
Variation: 18E (1985)
Garmin 2011 16E
The Garmin readings were taken at each airport.
Siskiyou County Airport and Rohrer Field are relatively close together as the crow flies and there is a 1˚ variation; the key is there is a ten year difference in the data.
I am thinking the shifting of magnetic north might have a bigger impact on surveys than buck hunters.
It appears that updated posting at the Tampa airport did not come about with a shift of one or two degrees ,but when the accumulated shift exceeded four (4˚). The nice thing about using a GPS is that it is simpler then a compass. (For Some!)
So this whole thing has had me bouncing around like a BB in a box because of the amount of information available on the net. It is tough to make a statement without sticking a foot in one’s mouth. At the start I thought Air Nav was a Go To site for magnetic variation, but last week friend sent me a better link.
http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/geomagmodels/Declination.jspA lot of folks are advising to get rid of old topo maps because of the changing magnetic north of the maps. I will save my old maps because they are a treasure of information regarding old mining activity and cabin sites.