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See now Jeff... from talking to my good buddy after he crossed the Atlantic
from Halifax to Portugal via the Azores... you just cannot beat a windvane. Sail by Hand across the Atlantic... not a chance. Stand watch and let the windvane do 90% of the sailing. There's enough work aboard to keep you busy. He never used his electronic autopilot at all. GPS data was hand plotted to chart and weather forecasts by VHF [ sailmail/fax.] He uploaded the logs to a website. Makes for a good read! Ever hear of the Cornholious Effect? :-) CM "Jeff Morris" wrote in message ... | Sailing by hand, eye, and feel is fun. Being lost isn't. While I sometimes do trips | without the GPS, this is to practice navigation, and I usually end up doing less "sailing" | because of it. | | My friends that have the computer drive the autopilot migrate between Nova Scotia or | Newfoundland down to South Carolina every year - they've easily logged over 100,000 miles. | I don't think they're lacking "the experience." | | -jeff | | | "Njord" wrote in message news:c_zqb.10359$pK6.8747@lakeread02... | Gee, doesn't anyone sail by hand, eye, and feel anymore? I always thought | getting there was much of the fun. Seems like all this automatic 'set it and | let it do the sailing' removes a lot from the experience. | | -- | | Njord | | "Lord, your sea is so big, and my boat is so small" | | Anonymous | | "Jeff Morris" wrote in message | ... | I would advise against using a computer as the primary GPS. And a | "plug-in" GPS (one | that can't work alone) is even worse. At the very least, get a small | handheld that can | stand alone, and connect it to the computer with a data cable. | | Although I have a number of computer charting programs loaded, and my boat | is wired | appropriately, I hardly ever use the computer underway. A small mapping | handheld (I have | an older GPSMAP 175, today I'd get a 76 or 176) plus a chartkit suits my | need much better. | I have friends that like using the computer, and have it wired to the | autopilot, so the | boat will "follow the mouse," but they have an enclosed center cockpit 41 | foot ketch, and | the computer is right down the companionway. Plus they have another GPS | at the helm. | | The last time I researched low end GPS units, I decided the Garmin GPS 72 | was the "best | buy" because it came with the cables that would be needed. I don't think | this is still | true - whatever you get, consider the "total cost" of all the accessories | you'll want. | The 72 is nice because it has a large display, its waterproof and floats, | and has a navaid | and tide database. | | | "Dennis Vogel" wrote in message | hlink.net... | I have a nice laptop running Windows XP with a nice big screen. | | Can anyone recommend a GPS plug-in for my laptop that comes with sailors | software? It should have all the good stuff like VMG. | | I've been away from sailing for several years. If this is not a good | choice | then can someone recommend a reasonable cost handheld or deck-mounted | GPS | system? | | Thanks, | | Dennis | Pearson Flyer #168 | | | | | | | | |
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