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![]() "Rosalie B." wrote in message ... x-no-archive:yes "Ric" wrote: I'd get the same make of radar as your chartplotter. Partly because the knobology will be the same between the two instruments, and partly because they will talk to each other better. I have a Raymarine chartplotter and bought a Furuno radar, and they won't properly share NMEA data - both manufacturers blame the other half for the incompatibility. I bought Furuno because all my research showed that they are fabulously reliable (and my personal experience has confirmed this) but I still wish I'd bought Raymarine because of the knobology and compatibility issues. We don't have a chart plotter, and the only things I have 'talking' to each other are the GPS and the computer charting system. I don't have the GPS working with the autopilot or the radar. I don't have the radar working with the GPS or anything else - and I don't intend to do so. Maybe I'm a Luddite, but for what we do, I don't see the need for it. The autopilot steers much better than I do, but with all the non-charted obstacles in coastal waters we can't set it and forget it anyway. I wouldn't think you are a Luddite, but you should think long and hard about not feeding the GPS' NMEA output to the radar. At the very least, it serves as a repeater for much of that data. And, as someone else noted, it provides the lollipop display of the location of your next waypoint on the radar screen. This is very useful information. I'm not sure I know what a chart plotter is, except that it seems like a lower tech kind of computer charting ??? I have a sailing boat, and I have my radar inside. It would be much more useful on the outside, but the downside is that it would be exposed to sun, salt and getting wacked by ropes etc. I have on my list of things to do to If I was exposed to sun, salt and getting wacked by ropes in our cockpit, I wouldn't go there either. AFA sun goes - I know too many people who can't go out in their boats anymore because of skin cancer. I don't want to be wacked by ropes either. Fortunately I'm waterproof and the salt will wash off. make a swinging arm that in is parked position holds the radar on the inside above the chart-table, but on its swung position holds the radar in the companionway where I could see it from the helm. I've seen this done a couple of times. Seems to work well, although I guess you'd have to have a remote so change scale etc. Depends on where you are sitting. We find that about 90 percent of our radar use is when we are on autopilot, and it is cold and/or foggy and/or dark, so that the favorite place to be is cozied up behind the dodger, peeking about at the radar and whatever is visible forward. So we favor the companionway or cockpit bulkhead as the favored location. Stick the radar halfway up the mast. If you have a rear gantry it is better there, especially if gimballed. The nominal range of the smaller Furuno, Raymarine and JRC radars is about 12 miles but in practise they are only really reliable over about 5 miles. They will pick out land over a greater distance, but that is not really helpful. Ships are the danger, and they are only really visible at about 4-5 miles. grandma Rosalie |
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