At 93000million miles away the rotation of the earth should have no effect on the size of thesun but it changes in size significantly.
Evidence, please.
Just look at how far away it looks and sunset then look at it miday.
The Sun and Moon
look larger close to the horizon than they
look when high in the sky. It's an illusion. Take some photos and measure. They're the same actual size. Do you have any objective data that says otherwise? But why would the Sun and Moon appear larger (because they're closer) when they're setting than overhead, anyway? That's the opposite of the FE explanations I've heard here.
Also weather balloons taking pictures at the same time of day,but different times of year show the sun higher in the sky then sometimes just above the earth.
OK? And...

Sundials, were designed when the world thought earth was flat,non of them would work today on a globe because the angle of the earth effectively changes through 46%every 6 months
Sundials again? You never replied in
the thread you started asking whether sundials would work on a globe (they work just fine).
The change in the Sun's declination is closer to 47° over the course of a year, but whatever. The non-perpendicular angle of the Earth's axis to the Ecliptic is the largest, but not only significant, component of the
Equation of Time, which is needed to convert apparent solar time to mean solar time. It amounts to about 10 minutes difference at the extremes. To claim "sundials wouldn't work" because of this is a bit of an overstatement, to say the least.
the one on a temple in India is accurate within 2 mins if used correctly.
Within 2 minutes of what? Apparent solar time? That's not hard to do with a well-designed and sufficiently-large sundial. What does "used correctly" mean in this context?
Hold a stick up right on the earth tilt it through 46% and see if the angle of the shadow changes at any time of day provided the sun is shinning.Whe sundials don't work the earth may be a globe.
Do you think the shadow wouldn't change when you wave the stick around if the Earth were flat? If it were spherical? Why?
How simple is that test,if the shadow doesn't change position it a globe.
On what basis do you say this? You do realize that a good sundial has the gnomon aligned with the Earth's axis of rotation, not just in some arbitrary direction, don't you? There's a reason for that. Do you know why?
Whatch someone from this globe earth site rubbish the claims without one constructive comment.Eric Dubay said this is a bogust site he's right.
Your claims get "rubbished" because they're, well, rubbish. That's all. If you have questions about the answers you get, ask them.