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#1
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Larry W4CSC wrote:
Oh, sorry but I forgot to mention that Raymarine's SeaTalk data network is as simple to hookup as a cabin light. There are only 3 wires....+DC, -DC(ground) and data. They couldn't make it simpler. The GPS and Gyrocompass and other instruments on Seatalk are simply hooked together, in parallel, wire for wire and when you power one of them, you power all of them. I have a Raymarine connection box on a bulkhead behind the helm where they all come together. It has European screw terminals in it. Nothing is simpler. Larry W4CSC You do? On your 16' jetski boat...or did you buy a bigger boat? -- * * * email sent to will *never* get to me. |
#2
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An heretical question -- are you really sure you want a radar?
I should say that I'm no Luddite -- when we finish with Fintry, she'll have two radars, a 12kw, six foot Furuno and a small Koden backup, but my wife and I are both experienced radar operators and our passages are generally long enough so that our watchkeepers get some training in the basics. But using radar on a relatively large, stable boat, with autopilot, and often two operators in the wheelhouse is very different from driving a small boat with one hand and eye and trying to make sense of a lot of targets on a small screen with the other. I would say fairly strongly that you can't operate a radar in Cape Cod Bay and drive the boat at the same time. There are too many targets -- boats, bouys, fishing floats with reflectors, a few ships, and so forth. Each of them requires separate attention to figure out whether it's a danger or not, and on a small radar, with only two electronic bearing lines, that means you have to keep a mental picture of what you've looked at and what you haven't. So, unless you're perfectly comfortable with dividing the two jobs -- driving and radar operator -- and handing one off to someone else, think twice about the radar. I'm based in Boston and learned to sail down East, so I do understand how white your knuckles can get in fog, but you can minimize risk by staying on the edge of the channels, stopping and listening every few minutes, and watching carefully. If you think you're going to go ahead with the radar, get someone to take you out with a radar and actually use it for a few hours. Best to do this on a clear day, so you can compare the radar picture to the visual. This is the best way to understand that it doesn't tell you much except that there's something there. I'd volunteer for this, but Fintry's still in England and doesn't have an engine at the moment, so you'd have to wait 'til next summer. As for brands, go the Newport Boat Show (9/11-9/14) and play with the major brands (Simrad, Raymarine, Furuno, Koden/Sitex, JRC). I would discount most of the talk of quality differences as Ford versus Chevy and pick the one that seems the most logical to you. The Koden on Fintry was purchased by her former owner (the Royal Navy), so I didn't choose it, but it works perfectly well. While we chose a Furuno for our big radar for Fintry, we took a Raytheon around the world on Swee****er, and I like the JRC in the mid range. Simrad is very interesting and has a different user interface. I haven't looked at the size you'll need. Make sure your mount gets the beam above everyone on the boat all the time -- there's enough microwave energy there to pay attention. This means you'll probably need an arch, as it will weigh less than a pole. Put your white running light up there, too, above the radar. Jim Woodward www.mvfintry.com "Wheres the sun?" wrote in message news:fiJ4b.322150$o%2.146075@sccrnsc02... I own a 24' Chapparal Signature Series cruiser and enjoy weekend trips from Boston down the coast to Cape Cod. A few weeks ago I found myself caught in the worst fog I have ever encountered, right down to the water, I could barely make out my pulpit. Thank god for my Garmin 232 GPS to make it home. My fingernails were dug deeply into the steering wheel as we continously listened to the Harbor Cruise ships' horns alerting us of their presence, we finally made it back in one piece. Can someone recommend a decent radar system for my boat. I do not have an arch so installation tips would be appreciated as well. Thanks in advance! |
#3
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Thanks for the help all, I am leading towards Furuno.
Jim, you hit the nail on the head with your statement. The wife and myself will want to know 'radar' inside and out before the purchase and install. I know what you mean, between the death grip on the wheel, one eye on the GPS and the other squinting forward through the fog I really don't need another screen to look at... ![]() "Jim Woodward" wrote in message om... An heretical question -- are you really sure you want a radar? I should say that I'm no Luddite -- when we finish with Fintry, she'll have two radars, a 12kw, six foot Furuno and a small Koden backup, but my wife and I are both experienced radar operators and our passages are generally long enough so that our watchkeepers get some training in the basics. But using radar on a relatively large, stable boat, with autopilot, and often two operators in the wheelhouse is very different from driving a small boat with one hand and eye and trying to make sense of a lot of targets on a small screen with the other. I would say fairly strongly that you can't operate a radar in Cape Cod Bay and drive the boat at the same time. There are too many targets -- boats, bouys, fishing floats with reflectors, a few ships, and so forth. Each of them requires separate attention to figure out whether it's a danger or not, and on a small radar, with only two electronic bearing lines, that means you have to keep a mental picture of what you've looked at and what you haven't. So, unless you're perfectly comfortable with dividing the two jobs -- driving and radar operator -- and handing one off to someone else, think twice about the radar. I'm based in Boston and learned to sail down East, so I do understand how white your knuckles can get in fog, but you can minimize risk by staying on the edge of the channels, stopping and listening every few minutes, and watching carefully. If you think you're going to go ahead with the radar, get someone to take you out with a radar and actually use it for a few hours. Best to do this on a clear day, so you can compare the radar picture to the visual. This is the best way to understand that it doesn't tell you much except that there's something there. I'd volunteer for this, but Fintry's still in England and doesn't have an engine at the moment, so you'd have to wait 'til next summer. As for brands, go the Newport Boat Show (9/11-9/14) and play with the major brands (Simrad, Raymarine, Furuno, Koden/Sitex, JRC). I would discount most of the talk of quality differences as Ford versus Chevy and pick the one that seems the most logical to you. The Koden on Fintry was purchased by her former owner (the Royal Navy), so I didn't choose it, but it works perfectly well. While we chose a Furuno for our big radar for Fintry, we took a Raytheon around the world on Swee****er, and I like the JRC in the mid range. Simrad is very interesting and has a different user interface. I haven't looked at the size you'll need. Make sure your mount gets the beam above everyone on the boat all the time -- there's enough microwave energy there to pay attention. This means you'll probably need an arch, as it will weigh less than a pole. Put your white running light up there, too, above the radar. Jim Woodward www.mvfintry.com "Wheres the sun?" wrote in message news:fiJ4b.322150$o%2.146075@sccrnsc02... I own a 24' Chapparal Signature Series cruiser and enjoy weekend trips from Boston down the coast to Cape Cod. A few weeks ago I found myself caught in the worst fog I have ever encountered, right down to the water, I could barely make out my pulpit. Thank god for my Garmin 232 GPS to make it home. My fingernails were dug deeply into the steering wheel as we continously listened to the Harbor Cruise ships' horns alerting us of their presence, we finally made it back in one piece. Can someone recommend a decent radar system for my boat. I do not have an arch so installation tips would be appreciated as well. Thanks in advance! |
#4
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![]() "Jim Woodward" wrote in message I would say fairly strongly that you can't operate a radar in Cape Cod Bay and drive the boat at the same time. There are too many targets -- boats, bouys, fishing floats with reflectors, a few ships, and so forth. I'd say that depends entirely on your own individual ability to multitask and set priority. Frankly, the workload you describe there is very low compared to what the human brain can cope with when trained and practised (try flying an airline into fog-bound La Guardia on a Friday night!). Marine radar is so easy to use (only two dimensions) and boats move relatively slowly and you can slow down and even stop in a boat. |
#5
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Yes, but the airliner has an autopilot -- nobody is actually steering
it, which was part of my point -- you can do this on a large, stable, vessel with an autopilot, but not on a small boat. And on the airliner, you have two pilots, an air traffic controller, and there are rules which pretty much everyone follows. And, finally, the controller that's guiding the airliner is on the ground and has full automatic radar plotting in three dimensions, so that every target is shown with course, speed and altitude. The small boat radar doesn't do automatic plotting and can do only two manual plots at a time on screen. Driving a small boat in Cape Cod Bay is a lot like driving a car in heavy city traffic. For starters, there are lobster pot buoys every 100 feet or so that you have to dodge (the big boat throws them to the side -- the small boat picks them up in the outdrive). Then you want to keep on course. There's a fair amount of traffic, and unlike on the city streets, it's not all moving in more or less predictable ways, and, in the fog, you can't see any of it. And so forth. Of course, I see people on the highway who drive and read the newspaper at the same time. May they live long and prosper, but I don't want them near me..... Jim Woodward www.mvfintry.com "Ric" wrote in message ... "Jim Woodward" wrote in message I would say fairly strongly that you can't operate a radar in Cape Cod Bay and drive the boat at the same time. There are too many targets -- boats, bouys, fishing floats with reflectors, a few ships, and so forth. I'd say that depends entirely on your own individual ability to multitask and set priority. Frankly, the workload you describe there is very low compared to what the human brain can cope with when trained and practised (try flying an airline into fog-bound La Guardia on a Friday night!). Marine radar is so easy to use (only two dimensions) and boats move relatively slowly and you can slow down and even stop in a boat. |
#6
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![]() "Jim Woodward" wrote in message om... Yes, but the airliner has an autopilot -- nobody is actually steering it, which was part of my point -- you can do this on a large, stable, vessel with an autopilot, but not on a small boat. And on the airliner, you have two pilots, an air traffic controller, and there are rules which pretty much everyone follows. And, finally, the controller that's guiding the airliner is on the ground and has full automatic radar plotting in three dimensions, so that every target is shown with course, speed and altitude. The small boat radar doesn't do automatic plotting and can do only two manual plots at a time on screen. What you describe above is actually rarely the case. I'm an airline pilot, and the workload even with modern aircraft is still much higher than on my boat. On older aircraft, or with military aircraft, there is simply no comparison. But the point I'm making is not just to argue which is the harder to manage, a boat or a plane, but it is simply that you can adapt to higher workloads as you get more experience. What is a high workload to somebody with little experience of a high workload cockpit is a cakewalk to somebody who has done it for a while. |
#7
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Ric:
We may need to agree to disagree, but I'll take one more shot at it. I think that when driving a small boat in heavy fog, dodging lobster buoys, and other traffic, you can't take your attention away from the wheel for more than a second or two any more than you can read the newspaper when driving sixty on the highway. Suppose you're on final in fairly choppy weather in a plane without automatic landing and there's no one in the right hand seat. Can you really do anything besides land the plane? No? Not because you don't have spare brain capacity, or even a spare hand, but because your visual attention has to be focused on the runway. Now, as you pointed out, this isn't a completely fair analogy -- the small boater can stop, pay attention to the radar for a few minutes, and then start again. However, few people will actually do this -- it takes too long to get where you're going. I want to ask a couple of questions -- please don't take offense, none is meant --- 1) How much experience do you have in small boats in heavy fog? 2) ... where there are pot buoys all over? 3) ... where there's a lot of traffic of all sizes, even on foggy days? 4) ... with small boat radars? By small boats, I mean 24' or so, with an outboard or outdrive, so that the steering is inherently unstable -- it tends to yaw if not tended all the time. By small boat radar, I mean basic -- no ARPA, just two electronic bearing lines and two adjustable range rings, and a seven inch display. By a lot of trafffic, I mean twenty or more boats and ships that would be in sight if it weren't for the fog. I ask because there aren't too many places in the USA where you get heavy fog, many pot bouys, and lots of traffic and just as I can't really speak to the workload of a commercial pilot, one who hasn't been here can't speak as well to the challenge we're discussing. Regards, Jim Woodward www.mvfintry.com "Ric" wrote in message ... "Jim Woodward" wrote in message om... Yes, but the airliner has an autopilot -- nobody is actually steering it, which was part of my point -- you can do this on a large, stable, vessel with an autopilot, but not on a small boat. And on the airliner, you have two pilots, an air traffic controller, and there are rules which pretty much everyone follows. And, finally, the controller that's guiding the airliner is on the ground and has full automatic radar plotting in three dimensions, so that every target is shown with course, speed and altitude. The small boat radar doesn't do automatic plotting and can do only two manual plots at a time on screen. What you describe above is actually rarely the case. I'm an airline pilot, and the workload even with modern aircraft is still much higher than on my boat. On older aircraft, or with military aircraft, there is simply no comparison. But the point I'm making is not just to argue which is the harder to manage, a boat or a plane, but it is simply that you can adapt to higher workloads as you get more experience. What is a high workload to somebody with little experience of a high workload cockpit is a cakewalk to somebody who has done it for a while. |
#8
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On Mon, 01 Sep 2003 21:39:06 -0400, Harry Krause
wrote: Larry W4CSC wrote: Oh, sorry but I forgot to mention that Raymarine's SeaTalk data network is as simple to hookup as a cabin light. There are only 3 wires....+DC, -DC(ground) and data. They couldn't make it simpler. The GPS and Gyrocompass and other instruments on Seatalk are simply hooked together, in parallel, wire for wire and when you power one of them, you power all of them. I have a Raymarine connection box on a bulkhead behind the helm where they all come together. It has European screw terminals in it. Nothing is simpler. Larry W4CSC You do? On your 16' jetski boat...or did you buy a bigger boat? I've installed an extensive electronic suite in a friend's '85 Amel Sharpi 41 ketch we sailed up from Satellite Beach, FL a few weeks ago. We're going cruising in it soon. Larry Extremely intelligent life must exist in the universe. You can tell because they never tried to contact us. |
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