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GPS map vs charts
Is a GPS map like the Garmin 176C a good alternative to carrying NOAA maps?
I live in the Chesapeake and would like to not have to carry large maps around with me. Worth the expense if I have the money? David |
GPS map vs charts
C-Map EPROMS have a few inherent problems......
1 - What do you do if the unit or batteries fail? No chart to plot.....Not good... 2 - You can't draw on a C-Map plug the location of that new sandbar you found 500 milliseconds after the keel did. I suppose you could put a few waypoints around it, though..... 3 - The damned things are like the paper chart, though, in that they are way too expensive to update often.....(see 2). 4 - You can scan your buddy's C-Map plug into your laptop like you can that new chart he got. Oops....we're not supposed to scan in the charts WE paid to draw, are we. I've given away a secret...damn. Yeomans work really neat with your GPS on that paper chart: http://www.yeomanuk.com/home/index2.htm It's as accurate as the width of your pencil lead.......even from a cheap GPS. On Fri, 17 Oct 2003 19:38:46 -0400, "David Ditch" wrote: Is a GPS map like the Garmin 176C a good alternative to carrying NOAA maps? I live in the Chesapeake and would like to not have to carry large maps around with me. Worth the expense if I have the money? David Larry W4CSC US Supports Apartheid! Vetoes UN resolution condemning Apartheid Wall. http://www.antiwar.com/hacohen/h052103.html http://www.theage.com.au/articles/20...917478560.html Can apartheid at home be far away?.... Apartheid NOW! Wall off Mississippi! |
GPS map vs charts
On Fri, 17 Oct 2003 19:38:46 -0400, "David Ditch"
wrote: Is a GPS map like the Garmin 176C a good alternative to carrying NOAA maps? I live in the Chesapeake and would like to not have to carry large maps around with me. I would say No. I use BSB-format charts on a PC, and still want to have paper charts - you can see a lot larger area on a paper chart than you can on a computer screen - and the computer screen is much larger than the screen on most GPS chart plotters. -- Peter Bennett, VE7CEI new newsgroup users info : http://vancouver-webpages.com/nnq GPS and NMEA info: http://vancouver-webpages.com/peter Vancouver Power Squadron: http://vancouver.powersquadron.ca |
GPS map vs charts
Keeping paper charts as a backup is a must. Electronic devices
can and will fail. Raster charts are just scanned paper charts so the accuracy is pretty much identical. Keeping them both updated is a chore. Vector charts (like CMAP) are digitized from those same paper charts so the accuracy is also affected by the digitization process. Our CMAP charts showed us going over land a few times on the ICW and especially in the Bahamas. All in all, the convenience of the electronic chart at the helm was very valuable. We would have run aground quite a bit more often if we were using paper charts simply because the immedeate feedback of having an electronic chart right in front of us when at the helm is hard to beat. In our case the device is a NAVMAN 5500. Doug s/v Callista "David Ditch" wrote in message ... Is a GPS map like the Garmin 176C a good alternative to carrying NOAA maps? I live in the Chesapeake and would like to not have to carry large maps around with me. Worth the expense if I have the money? David |
GPS map vs charts
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GPS map vs charts
I'm with Doug on all points. I still carry paper charts and probably
from old habits hard to die mold, a sextant etc as well. The charting program I use plots sights etc so I incorporate both. Change is happening though. Once the sextant and paper charts were first out but now they have become the backup. Regards - Fitzy "Doug Dotson" wrote in message ... Keeping paper charts as a backup is a must. Electronic devices can and will fail. Raster charts are just scanned paper charts so the accuracy is pretty much identical. Keeping them both updated is a chore. Vector charts (like CMAP) are digitized from those same paper charts so the accuracy is also affected by the digitization process. Our CMAP charts showed us going over land a few times on the ICW and especially in the Bahamas. All in all, the convenience of the electronic chart at the helm was very valuable. We would have run aground quite a bit more often if we were using paper charts simply because the immedeate feedback of having an electronic chart right in front of us when at the helm is hard to beat. In our case the device is a NAVMAN 5500. Doug s/v Callista "David Ditch" wrote in message ... Is a GPS map like the Garmin 176C a good alternative to carrying NOAA maps? I live in the Chesapeake and would like to not have to carry large maps around with me. Worth the expense if I have the money? David |
GPS map vs charts
I guess it's my training, but I'd be lost without a paper chart. I love my
electronic toys and even in San Diego Bay we practice using radar and often have a GPS connected to it for a second display of position and waypoints. But I always have my now worn and beat up chart folded to the right section for quick verification of location, depth, distance etc. "John Fitzpatrick" wrote in message om... I'm with Doug on all points. I still carry paper charts and probably from old habits hard to die mold, a sextant etc as well. The charting program I use plots sights etc so I incorporate both. Change is happening though. Once the sextant and paper charts were first out but now they have become the backup. Regards - Fitzy "Doug Dotson" wrote in message ... Keeping paper charts as a backup is a must. Electronic devices can and will fail. Raster charts are just scanned paper charts so the accuracy is pretty much identical. Keeping them both updated is a chore. Vector charts (like CMAP) are digitized from those same paper charts so the accuracy is also affected by the digitization process. Our CMAP charts showed us going over land a few times on the ICW and especially in the Bahamas. All in all, the convenience of the electronic chart at the helm was very valuable. We would have run aground quite a bit more often if we were using paper charts simply because the immedeate feedback of having an electronic chart right in front of us when at the helm is hard to beat. In our case the device is a NAVMAN 5500. Doug s/v Callista "David Ditch" wrote in message ... Is a GPS map like the Garmin 176C a good alternative to carrying NOAA maps? I live in the Chesapeake and would like to not have to carry large maps around with me. Worth the expense if I have the money? David |
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