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#1
posted to rec.boats.electronics
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First, I'd say that the Cat's skipper probably said that he saw it as
junk because he was used to something better. I've seen the world through a USN 3D radar and now I think that all other radars are junk, this is'nt really true but it is the way that I see it. My boat doesn't have a radar, it did but the previous owner tore it out, and if I get one it will be El Cheapo Dexulo whose sole purpose is as a collision avoidance alarm. Which brings me to; Second, for what purpose do you want it, collision avoidance or a navigational aid? If it's just an alarm, go cheap, mount low, but get the tiltable mount and as another fellow mentioned, specify to your salesman short range! If it is for a nav aid, spend as much as you can, mount as high as you can. Otherwise, you will be calling your own radar a piece of junk, after you've seen someone else's fancier radar [did you know that with a REALLY good radar, you can actually see {oops, sorry, gotta censor that, it's classified...}] ![]() Thirdly, you could do what I do. Heave to, throw up two red lights, set the auto fog horn to once a minute and go to bed. Lastly, to make a truly informed decision that you won't regret, you must See the various brands and models of radars, in the various configurations and talk to the operators about what they do and Don't like about it. And that's gonna take quite some time! When you run into someone who says 'this is the best darned radar I ever had!' and you ask him why And you understand his reasoning, then buy that radar and mount it in that configuration. You've gotten several good bits of advise here, but notice that no one has confirmed or denied whether the 1623 is better or worse than the 1715. Of course they couldn't because you didn't state the purpose. Well, good luck. And remember that I can fix a radar but I can't sell them. O, and ask that Cat Skipper [and everyone else] what radar Did he like, and Why. tom SS_Kanwara =-== luc wrote: I read in Practical Sailor about radar, and their reccomendations were the Furuno 1715 (? I think), and not rated as good was the 1623. I have a race boat, and want a radar, but as small and light as possible. While sailing aboard Derek Baylis, a Wylie Cat 65 this past weekend, I asked the captain what he thought of the 1623, since that is what was on board. He answered that it was the worst piece of junk for a radar he's ever seen, and he has much experience. Here I was ready to buy one, but now not so sure about the 1623. A few questions. Is there another small radar that is good? Is the quality of the radar directly related to the size of the radome? What are the pros and cons of locating a radar on short mast aft, as many cruisers have, or on the main mast of a sloop? thanks for any help, Luc |
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#2
posted to rec.boats.electronics
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Tlindy,
I strongly disagree, you are overestimating the lowest end of the radar offerings. You cannot just set a guard zone and have it detect a collision. There is no ARPA feature, and the MARPA feature requires a lot of opearator assistance, as well as an extra $900 heading sensor to help it better track targets. At the lowest end they are much more difficult to be used for collision avoidance with boats or land, paying more money quickly lessens the amount of time and expertise needed to operating them, but even then, a higher-end recreational radar probably requires more understanding to operate then any other device on a sailboat, and a significant concentration to operate. For example, on the lowest end radar most other sailboats don't appear on the screen unless you play with the gain with then requires even more concentration and experience, and features like overlaying a chart with bouys and depths can further ease the work load on a radar operator who is also piloting. I don't believe the average person should get anything less than an integrated chartplotter with maps a good 4kw radar, a lot of reading, at least 4 hours of on the water training, and resolve to use the radar in good conditions twice a month to keep up skills. Otherwise, all you might be buying is a radar assisted collision. Dan p.s. I use a Raymarine E-80 chartplotter and 2kw radome, and have it mounted the minimum distance up the mast I could arrange so that I have good close in coverage, and placed it on a self leveling mount so I don't have blind spots when the boat heals. I think the beamwidth is good, but wish I got the extra power so I can see other sailboats, especially the ones that are pointed right at me and have a very low return. Pushing up the gain a bit I can see them, but then I get false returns also. I also added a heading sensor to improve the MARPA performance, which also improved my autopilot performance. tlindly wrote: First, I'd say that the Cat's skipper probably said that he saw it as junk because he was used to something better. I've seen the world through a USN 3D radar and now I think that all other radars are junk, this is'nt really true but it is the way that I see it. My boat doesn't have a radar, it did but the previous owner tore it out, and if I get one it will be El Cheapo Dexulo whose sole purpose is as a collision avoidance alarm. Which brings me to; Second, for what purpose do you want it, collision avoidance or a navigational aid? If it's just an alarm, go cheap, mount low, but get the tiltable mount and as another fellow mentioned, specify to your salesman short range! If it is for a nav aid, spend as much as you can, mount as high as you can. Otherwise, you will be calling your own radar a piece of junk, after you've seen someone else's fancier radar [did you know that with a REALLY good radar, you can actually see {oops, sorry, gotta censor that, it's classified...}] ![]() Thirdly, you could do what I do. Heave to, throw up two red lights, set the auto fog horn to once a minute and go to bed. Lastly, to make a truly informed decision that you won't regret, you must See the various brands and models of radars, in the various configurations and talk to the operators about what they do and Don't like about it. And that's gonna take quite some time! When you run into someone who says 'this is the best darned radar I ever had!' and you ask him why And you understand his reasoning, then buy that radar and mount it in that configuration. You've gotten several good bits of advise here, but notice that no one has confirmed or denied whether the 1623 is better or worse than the 1715. Of course they couldn't because you didn't state the purpose. Well, good luck. And remember that I can fix a radar but I can't sell them. O, and ask that Cat Skipper [and everyone else] what radar Did he like, and Why. tom SS_Kanwara =-== luc wrote: I read in Practical Sailor about radar, and their reccomendations were the Furuno 1715 (? I think), and not rated as good was the 1623. I have a race boat, and want a radar, but as small and light as possible. While sailing aboard Derek Baylis, a Wylie Cat 65 this past weekend, I asked the captain what he thought of the 1623, since that is what was on board. He answered that it was the worst piece of junk for a radar he's ever seen, and he has much experience. Here I was ready to buy one, but now not so sure about the 1623. A few questions. Is there another small radar that is good? Is the quality of the radar directly related to the size of the radome? What are the pros and cons of locating a radar on short mast aft, as many cruisers have, or on the main mast of a sloop? thanks for any help, Luc |
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#3
posted to rec.boats.electronics
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"b393capt" wrote in
ups.com: I use a Raymarine E-80 chartplotter and 2kw radome Look inside your 2KW radome and see if it's all wet in there corroding up the pot metal it's made of. We'll look at ours in spring to see if it needs its 4th replacement....(sigh). It doesn't really "leak", as in rainwater pouring in. It breathes. It breathes in wet air after dusk which condenses all night on the pot metal parts, then burns off into 100% humidity swamp all day, expelling some hot air so it will be able to breathe in the next load of wet air, tonight. The pot metal turns into a white powder conductive salt that rains down on the circuit boards that SHOULD have been in a sealed container, but that would have required we use sealed plugs, not pins sticking off the printed circuit board for a connector. So they left it open. Not only is it all corroded up on the outside....but inside, too, where the data and receiver boards are located. Notice how the magnetron's soft iron core is all rusted.... Larry -- Halloween candy left over..... Is there a downside? |
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#4
posted to rec.boats.electronics
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4 units. Wow. What's the average life ?
Larry wrote: "b393capt" wrote in ups.com: I use a Raymarine E-80 chartplotter and 2kw radome Look inside your 2KW radome and see if it's all wet in there corroding up the pot metal it's made of. We'll look at ours in spring to see if it needs its 4th replacement....(sigh). It doesn't really "leak", as in rainwater pouring in. It breathes. It breathes in wet air after dusk which condenses all night on the pot metal parts, then burns off into 100% humidity swamp all day, expelling some hot air so it will be able to breathe in the next load of wet air, tonight. The pot metal turns into a white powder conductive salt that rains down on the circuit boards that SHOULD have been in a sealed container, but that would have required we use sealed plugs, not pins sticking off the printed circuit board for a connector. So they left it open. Not only is it all corroded up on the outside....but inside, too, where the data and receiver boards are located. Notice how the magnetron's soft iron core is all rusted.... Larry -- Halloween candy left over..... Is there a downside? |
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#5
posted to rec.boats.electronics
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"b393capt" wrote in
oups.com: 4 units. Wow. What's the average life ? A year or two. So far, Raymarine has been replacing them, as they did the Raystar 120. Can't complain about the tech support...but wouldn't it be better to fix the design? I notice the new radars on the dock are now in a different case, but still have the drain tit sticking out the bottom, instead of a pressurizing, SEALED radome. I don't understand it...?? Sitting in the muck at the bottom of the mizzenmast the 2KW radome is mounted on is an Icom AT-140 HF antenna tuner for the insulated backstay on the main. Its plastic box is SEALED with many screws and a rubber grommet. It has been awash in water since we got it, seawater spray offshore. The inside of it is as shiny new as it came to us. Why can't radar manufacturers use a SEALED radome with proper SEALED stuffing tubes that doesn't breathe in the muck and rot the guts? How silly....like the stupid push-to-open wire clamps the control cable on the radome has inside it, also in the muck....(sigh) I'm not asking for proper dry nitrogen pressurization....just something that SEALS and doesn't BREATHE! Changing radomes sucks! Larry -- Halloween candy left over..... Is there a downside? |
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