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Richard Casady August 20th 07 07:54 PM

A question.
 
On Mon, 20 Aug 2007 11:54:37 -0400, Jeff wrote:

I doubt there are many using CRTs for computers on boats. A bigger
issue is compass corrections. You want the radar close to the
compass so you can see both easily, unfortunately. The compass is an issue.


Perhaps not for computers, but there are both radar and sonar in use,
many with a CRT all you could get,and on some very small boats. Many
prefered CRT for the good visibility in direct sunlight. I do believe
that CRT are brighter. I know they used to be, by a non trivial
ammount. Might e-mail a merchant marine officer school and see what
the big boys use.
Furano radar a good brand, and is popular for both boats and big
ships. Someone sells a radar that works with a PC for a display. All
the radar electronics are up by the antenna. Radar can be had for less
than two grand, and so I plan to put it on my 22 foot runabout. The
depth finder is nearly useless, except for spotting fish, the entire
lake is the same depth. Maybe that is one reason so many of them are
simply called 'fishfinders.'

They make remote mounted compasses that have no moving parts except
the indicater needle. Had one like that on a 1944 built biplane. You
can make a six foot [folding?] mast for it if you have to.

The compass is always the important issue. It and the clock are the
most important instruments on any boat. People even set their clocks
with short wave radio signals. I suppose you could check a compass
with a GPS.

Casady

Peter August 21st 07 01:32 PM

August 15 - Taking a Bath, and other travels
 
Skip, I agree with another poster, keep the reports coming. As for
the negative responses, rest assure that many of their authors have
"never been there". I am reminded of a particular thread when a
poster exclaimed "what were they doing there at that time, anyway?"
Had he ever been there, he'd know!

My only complaint is that on this board the entire thread is displayed
each time there is a new post and therefore, it is not easy to read,
having to scroll through pages and pages of posts that may be a month
old.

Peter
s/v Now or Never!


Vic Smith August 21st 07 01:42 PM

August 15 - Taking a Bath, and other travels
 
On Tue, 21 Aug 2007 05:32:34 -0700, Peter wrote:

Skip, I agree with another poster, keep the reports coming. As for
the negative responses, rest assure that many of their authors have
"never been there". I am reminded of a particular thread when a
poster exclaimed "what were they doing there at that time, anyway?"
Had he ever been there, he'd know!

My only complaint is that on this board the entire thread is displayed
each time there is a new post and therefore, it is not easy to read,
having to scroll through pages and pages of posts that may be a month
old.

Check out newsreaders, which are much more efficient for reading
newsgroups. You must be able to connect to a news server, however.
My ISP provides a news server, as I think most do.
The one I have used for many years, though I have an older version:
http://www.forteinc.com/main/homepage.php

--Vic

Rosalie B. August 21st 07 04:03 PM

August 15 - Taking a Bath, and other travels
 
Peter wrote:

My only complaint is that on this board the entire thread is displayed
each time there is a new post and therefore, it is not easy to read,
having to scroll through pages and pages of posts that may be a month
old.

Peter
s/v Now or Never!


You need a better news reader then. I can set mine to show only the
posts I have not read. (I use Forte Agent and I also get my email
that way, but there are other ways to do it.


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