OK, ogive. It ain't a guess.
Ogive is expressed in diameters. Not calibers, diameters. A 7 ogive on a 30 IS NOT the same curve as a 7 ogive on a 6mm.
Here's a way to describe the ogive. We'll draw a bullet ogive on the wall.
- take a soup can and nail it to the wall laying "flat." (or you can just draw a soup can if'n you're artistically inclined and don't want nailholes in your wall....just don't get mixed up and draw a soupcon, wouldn't be prudent)
- now measure the diameter of the soupcon (ooops, soup can) let's just say it's 2 inches.
- now reach up a couple feet above the can and hang a plumb bob on the wall so it comes down in line with the end of the can (oops, there's a nail-in-the-wall!) Now you've got a layed down soup can with a vertical string hanging down juuust in line with the end.
Now comes the tricky part.
- measure up the string 6 diameters from the bottom of the can, in this case that will be 12 inches (6 diameters times 2 diameters) above the
bottom or 10" above the top of the can.
- now DRIVE ANOTHER NAIL! (get used to it)
- hook a string to the nail, grab a pencil or a scribe (or even a sawzall if you want a permanent record) and draw an arc from the bottom of the can extending out like the bottom half of a bullet. If you want BOTH sides so's it looks like a bullet then repeat the procedure from the bottom side. (Just don't use the sawzall for this mark unless you want a sheetrock "bullet" to carry in your pocket.......)
- you've just described a tangent ogive.
You'se can do these all over the walls if you want to describe different ogives.
NOW, secant ogive. Move the nail..... keep the length of the string the same but move the nail so that it still intersects at the same point, the corner of the can (not con, no)
- you've just described a secant ogive.
useta'could you could search "ogive definition" on the WWW and get some good pix.
no longer, all pix I found were flawed
hth
al
BTW, the way the realio-trulio dudes do the deed is using a cool device called an Optical Comparator which projects a hunnerd times enlarged image on the wall (no nails) for most 'scruciatin' accuracy. Said image is projected onto a grid........Cool tools indeed optical comparators, definitely better than sliced beets.