Interesting. The stuff I've read for night navigation always takes you back to basic (or not so basic in my case) celestial stuff. The pole star is obvious, but you can in addition use other stars or even Venus if you've got the tables and a means of measuring the altitude of an object. You need to be stationary to do this (or at least in something that stays at the same height and roughly level), so I'm guessing the Lunar compass allows you to hold a bearing? The problem at night in the desert is that you can't see into the shadows. At walking pace it makes sense to travel at night, but at 30 mph the risk of going into some wadi (a la Simon Pavey, who was going rather faster but couldn't find the bike when he came round hours later due to the distance he travelled after he came off!) would seem to outweigh the benefits. Dawn and dusk are good times for physical work. Riding never seemed that physical although I am yet to try three wheels

The sun compass as I've been playing with it works two ways. Stationary and 10m away from the bike you align it via magnetic compass and it tells you the local time. Compare to a watch or radio time signal and the difference is Longitude via the Harrison method. The risk here is if you are close to the Grenwich Meridian you don't know if you are east of west, an error that can take you outside visual search distance. Measure the length of the shadow and calculate the angle of the sun via the known height of the gnomon and you have latitude (less accurate but less bulky than a theodolite). You can then set your local watch, put the compass back on a vehicle and travel on a bearing by keeping the shadow on the right time. All done by clockwork and the odd valve if you want to be flash

The skill is in the estimating and confidence. With any analogue system the operator can choose to put the needle a fraction under or over the line. Knowing that at 11.10 the shadow should be just off the 11.00 line is the fraction of a degree that brings the target up right on the nose and makes you look like you know what you are doing. If you aren't that good, aiming off in a known direction (an idea from Sir Francis Chichester) means you half the search area when you think you have arrived. You need to practice and decide which system you go for. To me the big thing with GPS is that there is no skill required, they can train monkeys to follow the pointer until it says you are 5m from the target.
I think more research is required. If the lunar compass is what I think it is it shouldn't take a genius (not currently available) to make the sun compass work at night. Who was it who suggested using a torch

Andy