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#1
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cavelamb wrote:
anybody have any cool navigation tricks to share? We went over running fixes tonight in class. got to go to Block Island! Always wanted to go there. Keep all three GPSs dry, and spare Lion cells on hand? (How crass of me!) Brian W :-) |
#2
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Brian Whatcott wrote:
cavelamb wrote: anybody have any cool navigation tricks to share? We went over running fixes tonight in class. got to go to Block Island! Always wanted to go there. Keep all three GPSs dry, and spare Lion cells on hand? (How crass of me!) Brian W :-) All the GPS shows is course to destination. Based on that, how does one determine set and drift? |
#3
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On Fri, 13 Feb 2009 12:11:49 -0600, cavelamb
wrote: All the GPS shows is course to destination. Based on that, how does one determine set and drift? Deviation from your dead reckoning plot, assuming you maintain a DR. |
#4
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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"cavelamb" wrote in message
m... Brian Whatcott wrote: cavelamb wrote: anybody have any cool navigation tricks to share? We went over running fixes tonight in class. got to go to Block Island! Always wanted to go there. Keep all three GPSs dry, and spare Lion cells on hand? (How crass of me!) Brian W :-) All the GPS shows is course to destination. Based on that, how does one determine set and drift? If you don't have a chartplotter associated with the unit, then the paper chart is how. I don't have a chartplotter (yet)... don't really need it, since most of my sailing is done on or near the bay, and I'm quite familiar with the currents. For me, it mostly doesn't matter that much. When the fog rolls in, we tend to avoid the shipping lanes and keep a good watch. -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com |
#5
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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cavelamb wrote:
Brian Whatcott wrote: cavelamb wrote: anybody have any cool navigation tricks to share? We went over running fixes tonight in class. got to go to Block Island! Always wanted to go there. Keep all three GPSs dry, and spare Lion cells on hand? (How crass of me!) Brian W :-) All the GPS shows is course to destination. Based on that, how does one determine set and drift? Even the simplest of handhelds give you cross track error,,, from that it's a trivial calculation. Cheers Martin |
#6
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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On Fri, 13 Feb 2009 12:11:49 -0600, cavelamb
wrote: All the GPS shows is course to destination. Based on that, how does one determine set and drift? The wiseass answer is that that is what air navigation slide rules are for. Pilots do it at 600 mph with all the gear on their lap, or at least they used to. When I learned to fly the navaid was VOR, which gave you the heading and distance from a station, and you set it and kept the needle centered. You fles over the stations rather than the shortest distance. The gear learned to read two stations and give you lat long and other things. Called that area nav. Very expensive and forgotten, like Decca. You could get sextant size fixes, half a mile. In good weather, DR would get you within sight of the destination after 300 miles without a fix, once you had the wind figured. Who remembers Consol and Consolan. You listened to a tone and got a line of position. All you needed was a short wave radio. That **** is long gone and nearly forgotten. I have not thought of either for decades. Set and drift? Why would you care, when there is no reason to know. When you can just set the true course and keep the needle centered. GPS gives you something to steer by, not a starting point for calculation.. You center the needle and and go straight there. In a fast powerboat speed and heading changes show up quickly. Did I mention that it will display a speedometer.What it does is store fixes and calculate the speed and course. It will show track on a lat long grid.Assuming you have the features of a ten year old handheld. I bought a handheld about ten years ago that did everything damn near. If it could cook Id have married it. Could have a compass dial. Did maps.Had a 3x3 screen with red lighting. Took 8 AA or the lighter socket. While many electronics run on anything from 6 to 36, it is in fact, 12 V. Eats batteries. You could remove the tilt adjustable antenna and use a remote cable. Eagle, the freshwater fishfinder makers. I get the impression you have never been near a GPS. If all they did was lat long to sextant accuracy, they would still sell. Casady |
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