Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Lionheart's Raymarine setup is the Smart Heading Sensor, RL70CRC Plus
color radar/chart plotter display and the 2KW radar with the circuit board antenna spun by the tape deck motor (go look, that's what it is!) Keep a spare rubber band....er, ah, drive belt aboard as well as a spare O-ring (ours leaked and Raymarine replaced the whole receiver). You don't need the fancy heading sensor to get great resolution from the MARPA because it uses the GPS data to find the ship's location. All I see the magnetic sensor does is point the boat symbol and display in the right direction when you're SITTING STILL. As soon as you move, with no compass data, the display spins around right, anyway, when the GPS tells it which way the boat is moving. I guess the compass makes it start faster, though, as it's already in the right direction. Big deal. Disconnect your fluxgate from Seatalk and try it. I think ours works even better using the compass data off the NMEA network from our B&G Network Pilot autopilot's fluxgate, actually. I can switch it to either, easily, on my custom control panel. Anyway, it tracks MARPA targets very well, as long as the radar doesn't miss them too often on its scan, like in heavy seas. If there are a lot of returns in the target's area and you're rockin' and rollin' so the target is spotty, MARPA will mistake any fairly valid target that MIGHT be the one you want and go off tracking the big bell bouy, instead of the boat you wanted. It'll do that. Any computer running on spotty data from a converted analog signal (radar) would. But, it's a great thing to have, anyway. Plan on buying an external ALARM! Some idiot thought it was funny to make it beep like a cellphone that just found a tower when it alarms. It isn't even going to wake up the sleeping helmsman slumped over the display. It's just WEAK. Because of the widely variable nature of analog radar in the pitching and yawing, you'll get some false alarms, no matter how fast the compass input is. Those darn bouys change course when that following sea pushes up on the stern and you're trying to keep it straight hard over and losing the battle.... This also might be caused by false data from the compass sensors at high heel angles. Notice how the warning on the gyro unit and fluxgate say they must be with in TEN DEGREES of vertical when you mount them. What the hell sailboat is THAT gonna work on, a 100' trimaran?! No, he's all sideways, too on the face of that swell.....more than 10 degrees, easy! We used to have the original compass sensor Raymarine sold for the system. It's in a cabinet as we installed the much-more-expensive SHS. I don't really see any operational differences...... If you're interested in the compass sensor, just answer me here. My cap'n will sell it at a bargain. It's the NMEA model but has seatalk plugs on it to confuse everyone. We got the cable to plug into it if you're interested. It's never been abused was mounted in a custom made teak box in the cabin of the Endeavour 35 he had last. The new system is in an Amel Sharki 41 ketch, "Lionheart". Save ya a few bucks....(c; On 10 Nov 2003 23:19:32 GMT, (BOEING377) wrote: I am planning to install a Raytheon radar R 70RC plus CRT display/controller.which has a MARPA feature which tracks 10 targets. How well does this MARPA feature work if you have a stable fast reacting heading ref (KVH gyro stabilized flux gate in my case)? I may use only the 2 KW transceiver which has so-so angular resolution. I am mostly interested in tarcking boats that are within 3 miles of my position. I got feedback from one user who said his worked great. He had the Ray smart heading sensor which is a flux gate with a rate gyro. Anyone else using this Ray MARPA feature? Comments? Anyone out there using HSB to have two radar displays working off one transceiver? Any glitches? Larry W4CSC "Very funny, Scotty! Now, BEAM ME MY CLOTHES! KIRK OUT!" |