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additional navigation lights.
I am Tosk wrote:
In , says... On Sun, 21 Mar 2010 22:36:00 -0400, I am Tosk wrote: Still keep the lights on though for those hard inflatables that the yachties tend to give their kids to get drunk and fly around in at night;) What makes you think those are the kids? :-) You *******! You killed Kenny!! ;) Scotty It's: You killed Kenny! You *******! You were close. |
additional navigation lights.
In article , LarryG86
@gmail.com says... I am Tosk wrote: In , says... On Sun, 21 Mar 2010 22:36:00 -0400, I am Tosk wrote: Still keep the lights on though for those hard inflatables that the yachties tend to give their kids to get drunk and fly around in at night;) What makes you think those are the kids? :-) You *******! You killed Kenny!! ;) Scotty It's: You killed Kenny! You *******! You were close. Yeah, I know, the guy stole it from me;) Scotty -- For a great time, go here first... http://tinyurl.com/ygqxs5v |
additional navigation lights.
On Mar 21, 3:21*pm, Wayne.B wrote:
On Sun, 21 Mar 2010 09:49:22 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: Pick up a copy of the Inland/International navigation rules or read them online - you can also download a copy in PDF format I believe. http://www.amazon.com/Navigation-Rul.../dp/0939837498 http://www.navcen.uscg.gov/mwv/navrules/rotr_online.htm Thanks for those links, Tom. I will be doing some studying. I suppose the reason I'm asking all these questions about Nav. Lights is I want to update my boat *to better standards and make it as safe as I can. I'd leave the lights alone for now as long as they are working OK since there are probably other things that need a look. * Running at night is very tricky even for the experienced, and should really be avoided when possible. *Take it real slow, especially the first few times. * Everything that looks familiar during daylight looks entirely different in the dark, and distances are much more difficult to judge accurately. Back in my sailboat days I ran literally thousands of miles in the dark with no incidents and noradarbut with a few close calls, some way too close for comfort. *Now that I've gotten used to running withradarat night I would never operate without it if at all possible. * Evenradaris not perfect however. *Off the coast of the Dominican Republic we were surprised several times by small wooden fishing skiffs operating 12 or more miles offshore with no lights and noradar image at all. *They are totally invisible until you are almost on them, even in daylight. *They would see us however and either yell or shine a light at us, not a really satisfactory way of navigating. That's one of my reasons for recommending a goodradarreflector. Wayne, can a person nail a coffee can onto a long stick, stand it up and screw it onto a windshield bracket and get by? *Ducking!* |
additional navigation lights.
In article 7901bd9b-0cb9-4527-8952-0be26ba6a9a8
@l25g2000yqd.googlegroups.com, says... On Mar 21, 3:21*pm, Wayne.B wrote: On Sun, 21 Mar 2010 09:49:22 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: Pick up a copy of the Inland/International navigation rules or read them online - you can also download a copy in PDF format I believe. http://www.amazon.com/Navigation-Rul.../dp/0939837498 http://www.navcen.uscg.gov/mwv/navrules/rotr_online.htm Thanks for those links, Tom. I will be doing some studying. I suppose the reason I'm asking all these questions about Nav. Lights is I want to update my boat *to better standards and make it as safe as I can. I'd leave the lights alone for now as long as they are working OK since there are probably other things that need a look. * Running at night is very tricky even for the experienced, and should really be avoided when possible. *Take it real slow, especially the first few times. * Everything that looks familiar during daylight looks entirely different in the dark, and distances are much more difficult to judge accurately. Back in my sailboat days I ran literally thousands of miles in the dark with no incidents and noradarbut with a few close calls, some way too close for comfort. *Now that I've gotten used to running withradarat night I would never operate without it if at all possible. * Evenradaris not perfect however. *Off the coast of the Dominican Republic we were surprised several times by small wooden fishing skiffs operating 12 or more miles offshore with no lights and noradar image at all. *They are totally invisible until you are almost on them, even in daylight. *They would see us however and either yell or shine a light at us, not a really satisfactory way of navigating. That's one of my reasons for recommending a goodradarreflector. Wayne, can a person nail a coffee can onto a long stick, stand it up and screw it onto a windshield bracket and get by? *Ducking!* Most coffee cans are now made of plastic, so, give it a try;) Scotty -- For a great time, go here first... http://tinyurl.com/ygqxs5v |
additional navigation lights.
On Mar 23, 11:39*am, I am Tosk
wrote: In article 7901bd9b-0cb9-4527-8952-0be26ba6a9a8 @l25g2000yqd.googlegroups.com, says... On Mar 21, 3:21*pm, Wayne.B wrote: On Sun, 21 Mar 2010 09:49:22 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: Pick up a copy of the Inland/International navigation rules or read them online - you can also download a copy in PDF format I believe.. http://www.amazon.com/Navigation-Rul.../dp/0939837498 http://www.navcen.uscg.gov/mwv/navrules/rotr_online.htm Thanks for those links, Tom. I will be doing some studying. I suppose the reason I'm asking all these questions about Nav. Lights is I want to update my boat *to better standards and make it as safe as I can. |
additional navigation lights.
On Mon, 22 Mar 2010 08:04:01 -0400, hk
wrote: In a previous post, a question was asked: "Aren't most nav lights on or near the bow of most boats???" Your response: "No." How the hell would you know whether there are more boats with side or otherwise mounted nav lights than combo bow mounted nav lights? As there are far more small boats than large boats, I suspect there are more combo than split red/green nav lights on boats. And aren't combos satisfactory for boats up to 20 meters long? That would cover your old barge, wouldn't it? Nothing prevents you from using sidelights. Hell, I have bow-mounted, separate nav lights on my 21' Parker. I had the standard combo light removed to accommodate my anchor roller: http://tinyurl.com/yz48s97 You are a pompous ass, w'hine. Harry, if you don't like my posts, perhaps you shouldn't read them. I'm certainly not seeking your approval. Frankly I don't read most of your posts, and even have you kill filed on many of my computers because I have better things to do, you don't interest me very much, and it gets tiring watching your twisted mind devolve into yet another layer of neuroses. |
additional navigation lights.
On 3/23/10 6:40 PM, Wayne.B wrote:
On Mon, 22 Mar 2010 08:04:01 -0400, wrote: In a previous post, a question was asked: "Aren't most nav lights on or near the bow of most boats???" Your response: "No." How the hell would you know whether there are more boats with side or otherwise mounted nav lights than combo bow mounted nav lights? As there are far more small boats than large boats, I suspect there are more combo than split red/green nav lights on boats. And aren't combos satisfactory for boats up to 20 meters long? That would cover your old barge, wouldn't it? Nothing prevents you from using sidelights. Hell, I have bow-mounted, separate nav lights on my 21' Parker. I had the standard combo light removed to accommodate my anchor roller: http://tinyurl.com/yz48s97 You are a pompous ass, w'hine. Harry, if you don't like my posts, perhaps you shouldn't read them. I'm certainly not seeking your approval. Frankly I don't read most of your posts, and even have you kill filed on many of my computers because I have better things to do, you don't interest me very much, and it gets tiring watching your twisted mind devolve into yet another layer of neuroses. In other words, when you lay down a like of bull**** as you did with the nav light question, because you are the mighty w'hine, no one is supposed to question it? You're not in charge here, w'hine. |
additional navigation lights.
On 3/23/10 7:51 PM, hk wrote:
On 3/23/10 6:40 PM, Wayne.B wrote: On Mon, 22 Mar 2010 08:04:01 -0400, wrote: In a previous post, a question was asked: "Aren't most nav lights on or near the bow of most boats???" Your response: "No." How the hell would you know whether there are more boats with side or otherwise mounted nav lights than combo bow mounted nav lights? As there are far more small boats than large boats, I suspect there are more combo than split red/green nav lights on boats. And aren't combos satisfactory for boats up to 20 meters long? That would cover your old barge, wouldn't it? Nothing prevents you from using sidelights. Hell, I have bow-mounted, separate nav lights on my 21' Parker. I had the standard combo light removed to accommodate my anchor roller: http://tinyurl.com/yz48s97 You are a pompous ass, w'hine. Harry, if you don't like my posts, perhaps you shouldn't read them. I'm certainly not seeking your approval. Frankly I don't read most of your posts, and even have you kill filed on many of my computers because I have better things to do, you don't interest me very much, and it gets tiring watching your twisted mind devolve into yet another layer of neuroses. In other words, when you lay down a line of bull**** as you did with the nav light question, because you are the mighty w'hine, no one is supposed to question it? You're not in charge here, w'hine. |
additional navigation lights.
On Mar 23, 8:53*pm, W1TEF wrote:
On Tue, 23 Mar 2010 19:43:19 -0400, wrote: On Tue, 23 Mar 2010 10:22:05 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: On Mar 21, 3:21*pm, Wayne.B wrote: On Sun, 21 Mar 2010 09:49:22 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: Pick up a copy of the Inland/International navigation rules or read them online - you can also download a copy in PDF format I believe.. http://www.amazon.com/Navigation-Rul.../dp/0939837498 http://www.navcen.uscg.gov/mwv/navrules/rotr_online.htm Thanks for those links, Tom. I will be doing some studying. I suppose the reason I'm asking all these questions about Nav. Lights is I want to update my boat *to better standards and make it as safe as I can. |
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