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I was chatting in the yacht club bar last night about course keeping
at night, and how hard it can be to steer a tight compass course, and how variable you get steering to other indicators like wind and stars. Today that leads me to wondering about whether a tight course is particularly valuable with modern instruments. Yes, a tight course is important near shore or other hazards, and essential in traffic, but is it necessary out on open water? 15 degrees of wandering costs less than 4 percent in course made good and few cruisers put the effort into trimming sails that efficiently. A DR track can only be as good as the course keeping. Are there other reasons than DR to try to steer a tighter course? Ryk |
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