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![]() "Ted" wrote in message ink.net... "Jack Erbes" wrote in message ... Ted wrote: snip Now that we have GPS, why are buoys needed anymore? Aren't you really interested in where the channel is located and not the location of some buoy that also happens to be trying to show you where the channel is located? When did buoys become a destination in and of themselves instead of merely a source of nautical information guiding us around underwater obstructions? Ted, Let me ask, have you ever actually spent any time doing coastal navigation? And if so, what navigation resources were available to you and which ones did you use? I used pilotage until GPS came along - a map and compass and dead reckoning with an occasional reference to a landmark on shore confirmed my position. I use range lights and my depth sounder to verify my location in the channel. See figure 13-10 on the following link. http://www.uscg.mil/hq/g-o/cgaux/Pub...tcrew/ch13.pdf I have a directional antenna to track the Coast Guard's medium frequency radiobeacons but have never needed to use it - never got lost. http://www.navcen.uscg.gov/ftp/RADIONAV/rbeacon.txt One can also track AM radio broadcast stations with this device if needed. When offshore, if you are able to remember which ocean you are in, then its not very difficult to know what direction on the compass land can be found. I measure distance in gallons of fuel. While heading offshore, when one third of my fuel supply is exhausted then I'm as far out to sea as is allowed by the skipper (me). After GPS, my map and compass stay in my emergency kit. They haven't seen the light of day in years. I have only lost the GPS signal in two places on earth - north of the royal observatory in Greenwich England and in the harbor west of Naples Italy. Years ago, before GPS, a friend of mine returning from sea had an unexpected magnetic source on his boat that affected his compass and took him fifty miles off course. This "compass failure" almost ran him out of fuel before he reached shore. I don't put much faith in the cry of the geezers about the undisputed reliability of the simple magnetic compass and the paper map. I don't believe that most of them even go boating. They just sit on the internet and run their mouth. By the way... I have also been in weather bad enough that my paper chart fell off the table into the 4 inches of salt water on the floor and then floated away into the engine compartment while my GPS stayed firmly bolted to the wall in front of the helm. After an experience like that you might be able to imagine why I don't have much patience for geezers who ignorantly sing the praises of paper maps as the be-all and end-all in marine navigation and why I don't believe that most of them have ever been to sea. |
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