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Roger,
I did the same thing this spring w/ my battery/temp guages in my truck, for gods sake! Been driving this rig, often long distances, for almost four years; couldn't understand why my engine temp kept dropping as the trip went on. "Brain fart" is what a friend calls it, and as you say, in an airplane it can kill you, and is usually a product of fatigue, but also a distracted mind as in my case; I was preoccupied with a problem outside the present. Having experienced such a shift, I'm slightly more capable of analyzing a puzzling circumstance, at least when I'm rested, warm, dry and concentrating on the task at hand! lol Brad Snow s/v Aldonza "Roger Long" wrote in message news ![]() Right after this happened, I was telling myself that I was never going to tell a soul and glad that I was alone on board. Later, I realized that, if it had happened in an airplane, I would have been posting it immediately in one of the aviation groups. Pilots spend a lot more time thinking and talking about safety than boaters. Back (not very far back) when I was flying planes, I was very interested in the human factors. So, in the spirit of aviation, here is this story which illustrates some of them: Http://home.maine.rr.com/rlma/Sailing0606.htm When I was flying, I noticed that my best performance was usually when a late passenger or other delay gave me time to hang around the plane doing a leisurely preflight and just getting into the mental space of flying. This shows that it applies to boats, at least in the other extreme. It also shows the insidious effects of cold and discomfort which begin creating mental tunnel vision and deteriorating performance well before the onset of actual hypothermia. I haven't had a lot of experiences like this on the water. My first thought when I got settled down and on course again was that I had experience exactly the state of mind many pilots were in just before they took a perfectly functioning and on-course aircraft and either flew it out of control or into a mountain. It can happen on the water too. -- Roger Long |