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Chartplotter Tide Tables
I sail the Columbia River. I would like to find a chart plotter that
has chart tables that cover the tidal influence - which runs all the way to Portland Oregon. I don't NEED it I WANT it. I currently have a Garmin GPSMAP 492C. The last tide station it displays in Knappa Slough, Oregon side. PC based programs seem to have many more prediction points - as far east a Bonneville Dam. Garmin has responded to questions but only with the answer that "the eastern most tide station and prediction is Knappa Slough." Any input? |
Chartplotter Tide Tables
I recently have and used the new Navionic (2007) charts with the Raymarine
C70 plotter. All tidal and current stations for my area are listed and functioning well. Check the navionic site for you area. "Brian D. Lawrence" wrote in message ... I sail the Columbia River. I would like to find a chart plotter that has chart tables that cover the tidal influence - which runs all the way to Portland Oregon. I don't NEED it I WANT it. I currently have a Garmin GPSMAP 492C. The last tide station it displays in Knappa Slough, Oregon side. PC based programs seem to have many more prediction points - as far east a Bonneville Dam. Garmin has responded to questions but only with the answer that "the eastern most tide station and prediction is Knappa Slough." Any input? |
Chartplotter Tide Tables
On Wed, 12 Sep 2007 08:19:43 -0700, Brian D. Lawrence wrote:
I sail the Columbia River. I would like to find a chart plotter that has chart tables that cover the tidal influence - which runs all the way to Portland Oregon. I don't NEED it I WANT it. I currently have a Garmin GPSMAP 492C. The last tide station it displays in Knappa Slough, Oregon side. PC based programs seem to have many more prediction points - as far east a Bonneville Dam. Garmin has responded to questions but only with the answer that "the eastern most tide station and prediction is Knappa Slough." Any input? We use a Tidefinder, a handheld electronic tide calculator with more tide and current locations than anything else I've seen. I haven't been able to find it anywhere on the web except here (scroll to the bottom of the page): http://www.eavtech.com.au/broadcast_...s_conex_1.html I think it's made in Bellingham, WA. It's well worth tracking down. Matt O. |
Chartplotter Tide Tables
I use Wxtide, which is a windiws port of X-Tide.
http://www.wxtide32.com/ It seems to have lots of Columbia river locations, but I don't know the area. Cheers, Michael Porter Brian D. Lawrence wrote: I sail the Columbia River. I would like to find a chart plotter that has chart tables that cover the tidal influence - which runs all the way to Portland Oregon. I don't NEED it I WANT it. I currently have a Garmin GPSMAP 492C. The last tide station it displays in Knappa Slough, Oregon side. PC based programs seem to have many more prediction points - as far east a Bonneville Dam. Garmin has responded to questions but only with the answer that "the eastern most tide station and prediction is Knappa Slough." Any input? Michael Porter Marine Design mporter at mp-marine dot com www.mp-marine.com -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
Chartplotter Tide Tables
I just purchased the Tidefinder TF-20 - in perfect condition, off
EBay. Now all I need is to figure how to program it. Do you have a manual that I could copy? Brian On Wed, 12 Sep 2007 23:42:15 -0400, Matt O'Toole wrote: On Wed, 12 Sep 2007 08:19:43 -0700, Brian D. Lawrence wrote: I sail the Columbia River. I would like to find a chart plotter that has chart tables that cover the tidal influence - which runs all the way to Portland Oregon. I don't NEED it I WANT it. I currently have a Garmin GPSMAP 492C. The last tide station it displays in Knappa Slough, Oregon side. PC based programs seem to have many more prediction points - as far east a Bonneville Dam. Garmin has responded to questions but only with the answer that "the eastern most tide station and prediction is Knappa Slough." Any input? We use a Tidefinder, a handheld electronic tide calculator with more tide and current locations than anything else I've seen. I haven't been able to find it anywhere on the web except here (scroll to the bottom of the page): http://www.eavtech.com.au/broadcast_...s_conex_1.html I think it's made in Bellingham, WA. It's well worth tracking down. Matt O. |
Chartplotter Tide Tables
For a very slick and relatively inexpensive solution, check out
http://www.toolworks.com/bilofsky/tidetool.htm freeware. I've used Tidetool from the Bahamas to Maine and coverage is available for much of the world, including the US West Coast. It runs on any Palm device with sufficient memory and I much prefer it to the Garmin tide utility on my 176C. Makes a nice backup device and allows one to check tide (and some current) info without having to scroll around on the GPS or chartplotter. Also has many more intermediate stations than the Garmin. Scott "Brian D. Lawrence" wrote in message ... I just purchased the Tidefinder TF-20 - in perfect condition, off EBay. Now all I need is to figure how to program it. Do you have a manual that I could copy? Brian snip We use a Tidefinder, a handheld electronic tide calculator with more tide and current locations than anything else I've seen. I haven't been able to find it anywhere on the web except here (scroll to the bottom of the page): http://www.eavtech.com.au/broadcast_...s_conex_1.html I think it's made in Bellingham, WA. It's well worth tracking down. Matt O. |
Chartplotter Tide Tables
"Scott Odell" jsodellatgmaildotcom wrote in message
... For a very slick and relatively inexpensive solution, check out http://www.toolworks.com/bilofsky/tidetool.htm freeware. I've used Tidetool from the Bahamas to Maine and coverage is available for much of the world, including the US West Coast. It runs on any Palm device with sufficient memory and I much prefer it to the Garmin tide utility on my 176C. Makes a nice backup device and allows one to check tide (and some current) info without having to scroll around on the GPS or chartplotter. Also has many more intermediate stations than the Garmin. Scott "Brian D. Lawrence" wrote in message ... I just purchased the Tidefinder TF-20 - in perfect condition, off EBay. Now all I need is to figure how to program it. Do you have a manual that I could copy? Brian snip We use a Tidefinder, a handheld electronic tide calculator with more tide and current locations than anything else I've seen. I haven't been able to find it anywhere on the web except here (scroll to the bottom of the page): http://www.eavtech.com.au/broadcast_...s_conex_1.html I think it's made in Bellingham, WA. It's well worth tracking down. Matt O. The link has moved... http://www.toolworks.com/bilofsky/tidetool/ I use it... works great. -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com |
Chartplotter Tide Tables
Bilofsky's software is always good -- he's one of the originals! But
I use WX-Tide http://www.wxtide32.com/ Has harmonic constants for lots of places -- all over the world, and lots of display/printing options. Cheers, Michael Porter "Scott Odell" jsodellatgmaildotcom wrote: For a very slick and relatively inexpensive solution, check out http://www.toolworks.com/bilofsky/tidetool.htm freeware. I've used Tidetool from the Bahamas to Maine and coverage is available for much of the world, including the US West Coast. It runs on any Palm device with sufficient memory and I much prefer it to the Garmin tide utility on my 176C. Makes a nice backup device and allows one to check tide (and some current) info without having to scroll around on the GPS or chartplotter. Also has many more intermediate stations than the Garmin. Scott Michael Porter Marine Design mporter at mp-marine dot com www.mp-marine.com -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
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