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posted to rec.outdoors.fishing,rec.boats.cruising
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Larry wrote in
: Still, I'd like to add an autopilot IF (and only if) it can operate at trolling speeds (about 1 knot or 1.5 mph). ComNav makes a few units which look like they'd work, but I'd like to hear that from someone other than the manufacturer or salesman, preferably someone who owns one. The boat is equipped with a Garmin 540 combination fishfinder/GPS chartplotter which issues NMEA sentences. -- If this is the only electronics in your system, I think your GPS, not your autopilot, is your problem. GPS only CALCULATES your direction of travel. The GPS signal only allows its electronics to figure out your position every second. That display that says your boat is pointed 085 degrees is only a guesstimate of the GPS electronics because it looked at the last few seconds of where you've been and where you are....a little 085 from where you were a second ago. At low speed, a GPS is damned near USELESS as a compass input for the autopilot to follow and shouldn't be used. Too many sailboats try to autopilot in poor wind conditions with the same wandering results because the GPS' idea of direction of travel over ground is wandering, too. What you need for the autopilot is a COMPASS SENSOR. Some are also called Fluxgate Sensors because they use a solid state magnetic field sensor, not a real compass. This device will tell your autopilot which direction the boat is pointed in EVEN AT ZERO MPH, always telling the autopilot to follow a MAGNETIC COURSE from its information, not a wandering GPS course from lack of information. Under 3-4 knots, the GPS is useless as a directional compass sense device because of its calculated guess. Use a real Compass Sensor. Most good autopilots have at least a Fluxgate magnetic sensor as part of their package. Unfortunately, most installations pay way too little attention to the fluxgate's mounting position way too close to magnetic objects mounted "out of sight" in lockers full of magnetic junk and CURRENT CARRYING DC POWER WIRING, which always radiates a strong magnetic field, which drags off the fluxgate or compass sensor's calibration in some odd fashion. The magnetic sensor, whether fluxgate or real compass, needs to be near the CG of the boat's axii, all 3 of them. It needs to be away from all power wiring carrying any kind of appreciable DC CURRENT and away from ALL MAGNETIC OBJECTS, anything made of steel or brass. That's a pretty tall order in a small boat, but very necessary to maintain compass course accuracy at very low speeds. On a rolling pitching boat, the solid state compass sensors are much better than the mechanical ones, which get moving around from the motion and give false readings. It's also best to get one that's "self compensating", one that you simply turn in a circle a few times, slowly, and it makes its own compensation chart which it stores to make more accurate fixes. http://www.maretron.com/products/ssc200.php just as an example..... |
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