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![]() scott wrote in message and when the batteries die? or your handheld gps goes overboard? or your fixed mount has a problem with the connection to the external antenna? You seem to not be understanding the conversation. If your GPS reciever fails in any way then you will not be able to track anything, buoys or channel centerlines. Thus, your response makes no sense. Let me try again. If you want to find the channel using the buoys then fine, go ahead and look outside the boat and find the buoys and use them to figure out where the channel is. If you want to use GPS to track the location of the channel then that is also fine. Using both is even better. The point being made is that there is no reason to ever need to track the buoys with the GPS. You should track the channel with the GPS, not the buoys. and personally i'd rather know where each edge of the channel is rater than the center. The danger lies at the edge of the channel. Fine, make two lines down the edges instead of one line down the center. GPS is quite flexible in that way. "Ted" wrote in message This sounds like a great time for a mild philosophical rant about the role of buoys during marine navigation with GPS. Buoys were invented to help skippers find and stay in the channel. GPS is an even better tool for helping a skipper find and stay in the channel. Why then do GPS manufacturers show all those buoys when what boat pilots really want is to know where the center of the channel is? A simple route line down the middle of the channel with a waypoint at each turn is so much better than a collection of a hundred obscure buoy locations. My thesis is that marking buoys with GPS or showing buoy locations on a GPS map is a complete waste of time and only done by skippers trying to cling to old navigation technology. It seems to me that channel centerlines, harbor entrances and underwater hazards are the only things a boat captain needs to see on his GPS. Throw all those buoy POIs away! They just clutter up your display. I plan my yacht adventures by going to http://map.marineplanner.com/mapping...chartindex.cfm and identifying waypoints by noting the lat lon from the nautical charts and then making a route down the center of all the channels I intend to navigate. I also make a proximity waypoint for any hazards I wish to avoid along the way. I find this to be much more useful than the marine POI data from Garmin. If I was to get more serious about marine navigation then of course I would go out and get the Garmin Blue Charts but for now the above technique is perfectly adequate for pleasure boating. |
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