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#1
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In article , Jeff wrote:
Capt. Rob wrote: How many of you rely on your GPS without consulting charts these days? How many of you back that up by using a handheld compass? No judgements, and I'm sure some will get on a high horse after lying about it. Just curious. My GPS is a very early handheld mapping unit (GPSMap 175) which provides limited charting info, assuming I have the chart chip. I always have a paper chart on deck and consider that my primary tool. I'm thinking about getting the new small Garmin that has NEXRAD updates and can also be used in a car, but the screen is still pretty small so I doubt it will replace paper charts. BTW, my boat is wired for computer charting, and I have software and charts, but I never felt comfortable relying on it. A close friend, who is a traditionalist in many other ways, has his autopilot driven by the computer. I hardly ever use a handbearing compass nowadays, but I used to use it a lot before GPS. I do use soundings frequently to double check positions. Also, when I travel outside of home waters, I often have dividers and sometimes parallel rules on deck. As for Notice to Mariners, I subscribe to the local edition and read it weekly, though I don't update charts. Do you get your via their email service? It's nice... I just print the sections that apply to where I'm going, then I update the paper chart in pencil the night before. When something changes, I make the change or erase the notation as necessary. -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com |
#2
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My GPS is a very early handheld mapping unit (GPSMap 175)
Jeff, have a look at the new Garmin GPS 192c. It comes fully loaded with all US Charts. I ordered one for the 35s5. It's quite a good value and has a great screen. RB |
#3
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garmin has some great units...
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