Rutter_1980 said:
Well that's kind of why I asked! I have no real idea how to do it.
What I'm after here is to find out what kind of answer you're
expecting.
Were you going to say 'at this distance the tower seems to be about one metre tall'? That only makes sense if you conclude that the tower, rather than being 1600m distant, is perceived as being (1600/38*1) 42 metres away. But why there? Why wouldn't you perceive the tower as being 1 metre away (thus only 2.4cm tall), or 10,000 metres away (thus 237 metres tall)?
The lesson here is that it doesn't make sense to try to assign an absolute height of an apparent image of an object. All you can do is assign an angle that it subtends.
The angle an object subtends is the inverse tan of its height divided by its distance:
θ = tan
-1(38/1600) = 1.36°
Rutter_1980 said:
The only thing left for me to do is to drive 2 hours to where one of these 38m high pylons is sighted - drive 1600m away from it and view it from there to see how it looks! Guess that's the only real way of knowing!
I can tell you how it'll look. It will subtend a 1.36° angle.
At arm's length*, you will be able to pinch it between your finger and thumb when held 1.9cm apart (1600m : 38m :: 80cm : 1.9cm).
*assuming your fingers are 80cm from your eye
Just pick something nearby, like I did with the (fictional) 20m tall building, 200m away.
Work out the principles, then apply the formula to your 38m tower.
This is not arm's length:
http://travelswithoutpants.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/DSCN0471-1024x768.jpg