THE WHOLE ART OF REFLEX DIALLING, Showing the way to make all manner of Dial's which shall show the hour by a spot of light reflected from a Glass upon any Ceiling whether it be flat or curved, or any other way irregular. AS ALSO Upon any other object whatsoever, and whether the Glass be plain, or convex, as likewise whether it lie in the plain of the Horizon, or obliqne unto it. Together with all necessary furniture belonging thereunto. All performed by an easy Instrument fitted, with lines to that purpose. Published by ANTHONY THOMPSON. LONDON, Printed, For William Leybourn M. DC. LVIII. depiction of horological dial instrument The figure of the Instrument M. N. the Window O. the Ceiling C. D. the Instrument A. B. the Semicircle H. the Centre of the Glass H. I. the line in which the picture of the movable Socket is represented to the eye in the Glass. K. L. the perpendicular thread H. I. being infinitely extended would meet with the Ceiling in some point: F. G. the movable Socket I. the slipping knot depiction of horological dial instrument in use The Publisher to the Reader. Courtous Reader, THese short precepts of reflected dialing, the late invention of a Friend of mine, I have thought fit to let the World see, and together with them, have annexed some precepts of the same Nature, formerly written by their Author Mr. Sam. Foster, sometime Astronomy Professor, in Gresham College; to whom the world is indebted for much variety in all kind of Dialling, and the first I know that in England made these sort of Reflected Dial's to obliqne Glasses, in so much that although this now published be wholly new, & without any dependence upon any thing ever done by him, yet the Author will not be ashamed to acknowledge that the difficulties that he found arise in the practice of some ways of that Author, put him upon this as he thinks more easy than any yet published. Farewell. CHAP. 1, The Description of the Instrument. LEt there be a straight Ruler of Wood, or Brass made A G, the length, breadth and thickness, at discretion: about the middle of it, or nearer to the end A, let the hollow B be made large enough to encompass a socket of Brass, into which the Glass must be fitted, and so that the fiducial edge A B C may be imagined to pass through the Centre of the Glass, when it is fixed. On the other side, as at F, may be made another hollow, like that at B, to the end you may use either edge of the Ruler, as occasion may serve, to the end of this Ruler must be added another at right angles C M, made movable, yet so supported by a bracket E, behind, that it may stand steady at right angles, and unto this let there be fitted a slipping socket with a fiducial edge high, let the piece C M be divided as a tangent line to the Radius B C, and of that length that it may contain about 47, or 48 degrees, which you need not divide beyond 45, on the other side K M, to a shorter Radius, let the tangent line be continued to 64 deg or thereabout, which will be fare enough for most Dial's of this kind, the whole representing two sides of a Rectangular Parallelogram, or Carpenters square, the one leg longer than the other, all which by the figure annexed, is easily understood. CHAP. 2. Precepts for the ready Use of this Instrument. FIrst, in the place where you intent the Glass shall lie, make fast some piece of Wood or Brass, exactly Horizontal, unto which you may join some other large piece of Board, Pasteboard, or other, it matters not, so as it be made to stand firm, and Horizontal, till the Dial shall be finished, and then taken away. Secondly, Having upon any part of your fixed piece of Wood made a mark, over which precisely shall be the Centre of your Glass, and upon this mark as a Centre describe so much of a Circle as is necessary, to as large a Radius as the Pasteboard will give way, and then the Sun shining hold up a thread, so that the shadow of it may pass through the Centre of your Circle, and mark where it cuts the Circumference, and at the same instant take his altitude, and find his azimuth either trigonometrically, or by some Astrolabe: (of all projections of the Sphere I know none so exact for the performance of all things necessary for the making these Dial's, as the solution of all other Astronomical Problems, as that commonly called Blagraves' Jewel, now put out, every way much amended, and altered by Mr. John Palmer, Rector of Eton in Northampton Shire my especial friend.) Thirdly, Having found his azimuth, set off now the South or East line, by help of a Scale of Chords made to the Radius of your formerly described Circle, we will take the Example of an East Dial; As for Example, in the latitude of 52 deg. 15 min. I observed in the Tropic of Cancer the Sun's altitude 15 deg. 00 min. by my Astrolabe I find his azimuth, then from the East, or six of clock line was 19 deg. or 71 deg. from the Meridian or Midnight line Northward, but because in this Example the Meridian could not be expressed, I set off 19 degrees upon Circle to the right Coast, and there through the Centre draw a line which shall represent the East azimuth. Fourthly, Your East or Meridian line, if it may be, being thus drawn, have recourse to your Astrolabe, or by Trigonometry find these ensuing things. First, for all necessary hours which will come upon the Dial, find the Sun's azimuth, and likewise what altitude it hath in that hour, and Azimuth, do this for the Tropic, and the Horizon (in Dial's made to Obliqne Glasses) the Aequinoctial, or for as many of the Sun's Parallels as you please, I have made choice of the distance upon the Horizon, and Tropic of Cancer, for in a flat roof two are enough, because the hours will be straight lines, otherwise if the roof be concave, convex, or any way un-even, it will require the finding of more points, writ these down, as in the Table ensuing. In the Latitude of 52 degrees, 15 minutes. Distances from the East on the Horizon. Hours deg. min. 4 36 00 From East Northward. 5 18 40 6 00 00 7 18 40 From the East Southward. 8 36 20 9 51 40 10 65 30 11 78 20 12 90 00 In the Tropi●k of Cancer. How. Azim. from East. ☉ Altit. H m. D. m. D. m. 4 00 37 30 02 00 5 00 25 40 10 00 6 00 15 00 18 30 7 00 03 30 27 30 8 10 09 00 37 00 9 00 22 30 45 30 10 00 40 00 53 30 11 00 62 30 59 20 CHAP. 3. HAving gone thus fare, your next work will be to fasten your Glass in its socket, to what obliquity you please, at adventure, and so to order all things that the Centre of your Glass may be directly over the Centre of your formerly described Circle, and the height of the Centre of your Glass equal to the thickness of your Instrument, so that the hollow part of the Ruler encompassing the socket, the fiducial edge may pass through the Centre of your Glass, which you may mark with a little speck of ink, till your Dial is done. The hours are to be drawn in this manner; First, limit the Horizon, if your Glass lie obliqne to it, to the end the line be not extended where the Sun can never shine; This work is easily done if the roof be flat, by finding only two points thus; Place your Instrument as before, and slip the movable socket to 0 deg. 0 min. then hang up a perpendicular thread in any part of the roof, that it may fall upon the Horizon, then putting your Instrument gently to the thread, observe with your eye where the fiducial edge of the socket is reflected through the Centre of your Glass, and there make a mark by a slipping knot, or any other way you please, then holding a thread upon the Centre of your Glass, gently extend it by the former mark, till it come to the Ceiling, and there make a mark, for that shall be one point of your Horizon reflected, repeat this work as oft as you please, so shall you have as many points as you desire, through which draw a line that makes no angles, which shall be the reflected Horizon. Go now to your Table of distances from the East and first set off the six of Clock line, in this manner: Extend a thread infinitely, that may pass through the Centre of your Glass, and the six of Clock mark in your Horizontal Circle, then in the reflected Horizon, hold up a perpendicular thread with a plummet at the end, that may just touch your other thread, and in the reflected Horizon. make a mark. Do thus for all the other distances according to your Table, and make several marks. Then lastly, go to your Table for the Tropic of Cancer, and in the mark in your Circle belonging to every hour, place your Instrument, and move the socket in the upright ruler to the degree of Altitude belonging to that hour, and marked in the Table, and with your eye project it by a thread hung up any where with a slipng knot in the same manner you did your reflected Horizon, and where a thread extended from the Centre of the Glass touching the Ceiling that is the point for that hour, and a line drawn from the point to its correpspondent in the Horizon shall represent the line where the reflected spot of light will be for all the year. Do this for all the rest. Chap. 4. IN this manner may the furniture of dials be easily put on, viz. the Parallels of Declination, of Altitude, of Azimuth, points of the Compass, proportions of the shadows to the Gnomon, and the like, which every man's industry will easily perform. Chap. 5. How to perform all the foregoing precepts, without any projection by the eye. FOrasmuch as the finding the reflection of the socket h i, through the Centre of the Glass; and after that the projection of the necessary points may seem difficult to some not used thereunto, though in itself it be easy; I have added this Chapter, whereby the help of an instrument A B, Let the perpendicular ruler of your projecting Instrument C M be placed within the room, and applied to that Azimuth to which you desire to project the correspondent hour, and then by help of your plummet B C observe what inclination your Glass hath to the Horizon in that Azimuth, double that, and add it to your tabular Altitude, and to that degree remove your sight, than a thread drawn thereby from the Centre of the Glass shall give you the point desired in the roof. Example, In the latitude of 52. 15 in the Tropic of Cancer, I find the Sun's Azimuth 15 deg. and the Altitude in our Horizon 18 d. 30′. But by a plumb line B C, I find the Glass in that Azimuth to incline to the Horizon 5 d. 00′, I say if to 18 d. 30′, the Altitude in our Horizon, I add 10 d. 00′. the double of the inclination of the Glass, and to the Altitude, viz. 28 d. 30′, I remove the sight h D i, and from the Centre of the Glass, through the point D, I draw a thread that shall show the point upon the roof. But because the Diameter of the Glass is commonly little, and consequently the inclination, not accurately to be taken, you must either continue the plain of your Glass, or work by this proportion. As the Radius, is to the tangent of the greatest Inclination: So is the Cousin of the Ark comprehended between that and the Azimuth in which you seek the Inclination, to the tangent of the Inclination sought. E B A D C 〈…〉 ED the greatest inclination. DC the Ark comprehended between the two Azimuths. BC the inclination sought. A the common intersection of the Horizon of the plain, and of the place, the proportion is plain, as AD Radius, is to DE tangent: So is AC, the Cousin of DC, to BC a tangent. But here it is necessary that the Glass be first fixed at a given angle. FINIS. A general and most easy way, to project hour lines on all kinds of superficies without any knowledge how they are situated in respect of Declination or Inclination. 1. LEt the Gnomon being first sharpened with a point be shaped, and fastened in such manner that it may no ways hinder, either the Draught of the Horizontal line, or the point of the shadow from having free access to the Dial at all times of the year. 2 Draw a Horizontal line by help of the Semicircle in a true level both in regard of itself, & also to the point of the Gnomon, through the whole superficies, on which the Dial is to be described, and if the superficies be very much inclined to the Horizon, so that it will not receive the horizontal line upon it, you must set up some board or such like, upon which for a time you are to inscribe the Horizontal line, and by help of which the hour lines are to be projected upon the superficies. 3 Observe the point of the shadow of the Gnomon, and the Sun's Altitude at the same instant of time. 4 By the Altitude observed, compute the Azimuth of the Sun from the Meridian. 5 The same Azimuth must be projected upon the Horizontal line, by help of a perpendicular thread either applied to the point of the Gnomon, or else covering to your sight the point of the Gnomon, and shadow both together; and with the same view cutting through the Horizontal line, observe exactly where it then cuts, for that same section shall be the Azimuth projected upon the Horizontal line. 6 Let any kind of Plain board, or Pasteboard be now applied to the Horizontal line, which must also touch the point of the Gnomon, and consequently shall therefore exactly agree with the Plane of the Horizon, upon which Plane the point of the Gnomon is to be signed, which may be called the Centre, and afterwards a right line is to be drawn also upon the same Plane from the Centre to the sign of the Azimuth, which was before marked upon the Horizontal line. 7 Then taking the same Plain board or pasteboard away, describe upon it the Meridian line or the hour of 12, draw it from the Centre before noted at the true angle that it hath from the Azimuth before drawn, and also to the true Coast of the World, and let it be extended on both sides the Centre if need be. 8 To the Meridian so pitched let the lines of an Horizontal Dial (for the Latitude wherein you are) be drawn thereto out of the Centre upon the Plain. 9 Then again, let the Plain be applied to its former situation, so as that the Centre of the Horizontal Dial upon the Plain, may agree to the point of the Gnomon, and the Azimuth also, which was drawn upon the Plain may fit with the azimuth before projected upon the horizontal line, which done, let a thread be fixed in the centre of your horizontal Dial upon the Plain, by help where of you may transfer every hour from the Plain into the Horizontal line, and let every hour be there noted with a several point, especially take notice of the hour of 12, which if it chance to run off your superficies, you must (till your Dial be finished) fasten some kind of object (whereon the Horizontal line is also to be projected) that may receive it. 10 After all this, take your Plain away (for there will now be no more need of it) and conjecture where about the Axis of the world would pass from the point of the Gnomon, to the Poles of the world, for in that place is the Meridian to be projected, which that it may be done more commodiously you must place some object in the way that may receive the same Meridian, unless perhaps the superficies of the Dial will supply that want which very often it doth, now it matters not whether that object be placed below or above the Gnomon, you may do that which you find most convenient, only so that it stand in the way where the Axis must pass, upon the said Object you are then to project the Meridian line which will soon be done by help of a perpendicular thread, cast by your eye upon the point of the Gnomon, and also upon the point of 12 in the Horizontal line, both together, for so the perpendicular thread projected upon the Object shall show where the Meridian is to be drawn. 11 Into this Meridian therefore one of the Poles of the world (which of them you find to lie most expedient) is to be inserted, by help of your Semicircle elevated or depressed from the point of the Gnomon, towards the projected Meridian line, according to the Latitude of your place, so shall a thread extended from the Pole point thus signed out, unto the point of the Gnomon, represent the Axis of the World. 12 Last of all, by these you may easily project all the hours, for if by your eye you repose the thread or Axis upon each point of such hours as were before inserted into the horizontal line, every one of these projections shall represent upon any superficies that stands in your way, each of the hours required, now to draw the hour lines thus represented by the thread is an easy thing for every one to do, among which hour lines the shadow of the point of the Gnomon as it creepeth along, will show the time of the day. FINIS.