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#11
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In deed you can. You can also find them at ham swap meets next to the old
boat anchor radios and at marine swap meets next to the 8 track stereos. The point was not that they are unobtainable...but that the product has been entirely abandoned by the leading retailers. You can also find differential receivers...which will continue to be marketed for the big boaters. But you will not find them for long on the retailer shelves. The thought that LORAN has some role as a backup to GPS in a military jamming situation is pretty close to ludicrous. You really think the electronic warfare guys are not going toimpact long wave? You think LORAN is resistive of jamming? Silliness...all silliness. Jim "Lyndon Nerenberg" wrote in message ... "Jim Donohue" writes: Go to West Marine. Search on Loran. How may sets do you find Steve? Go to froogle.google.com. Search on Loran. You can still buy new Furuno Loran-C receivers (but not from West Marine). And there are plenty of perfectly good units available on Ebay. --lyndon |
#12
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On Wed, 16 Jun 2004 18:19:16 -0700, "Jim Donohue"
wrote: In deed you can. You can also find them at ham swap meets next to the old boat anchor radios and at marine swap meets next to the 8 track stereos. The point was not that they are unobtainable...but that the product has been entirely abandoned by the leading retailers. Not entirely. http://www.furuno.com/Furuno/Rooms/D...ED834C6A%5D%5D But close. Which is what you'd expect for a system who's future was seriously in doubt until recent interest in keeping it alive. The current momentum to extend the life of LORAN only started in 2001. The thought that LORAN has some role as a backup to GPS in a military jamming situation is pretty close to ludicrous. You really think the electronic warfare guys are not going toimpact long wave? You think LORAN is resistive of jamming? I guess you don't know very much about RF jamming then. If so, you'd know it's MUCH easier to effectively jam a wide area if you only have to jam one frequency with extremely weak signals on it than a wide spectrum of RF with much stronger signals. So yes, LORAN is much more resistive of jamming than GPS. Orders of magnitude more resistive of jamming. Steve |
#13
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![]() Steven Shelikoff wrote: Where's Jim Donahue when ya need him? http://www.defensedaily.com/cgi/av/s...ontimeon.h tm Steve About 4 years ago, my industry (Marine) "sources" started saying that we should not count Loran out, and that plans were beginning to be formulated to update/upgrade the system. To be honest, my reaction, though positive, was not too optimistic. It's nice to read that this is still being considered, though if it does come to pass, I would also hope that they figure out how to increase range and coverage. Only a fool goes offshore/deepsea for extended voyages, with one single navigation method available ..... and six GPS receivers does not mean you have six methods, only that you have 5 backups for one method, maybe. otn |
#14
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On Thu, 17 Jun 2004 05:00:28 GMT, otnmbrd wrote:
Steven Shelikoff wrote: Where's Jim Donahue when ya need him? http://www.defensedaily.com/cgi/av/s...ontimeon.h tm Steve About 4 years ago, my industry (Marine) "sources" started saying that we should not count Loran out, and that plans were beginning to be formulated to update/upgrade the system. To be honest, my reaction, though positive, was not too optimistic. It's nice to read that this is still being considered, though if it does come to pass, I would also hope that they figure out how to increase range and coverage. I don't think there are plans to increase the range and coverage to include, for instance, mid ocean. The plans are to greatly increase the accuracy and to make LORAN a backup stratum 1 time source. That's good for several industries, like cellphones, broadcasters, etc. As long as it covers the coast out to around a few hundred miles, that's good enough for 99.999% of boaters. You usually don't need ot know *exactly* where you are when you're hundreds of miles from anywhere. Only a fool goes offshore/deepsea for extended voyages, with one single navigation method available ..... and six GPS receivers does not mean you have six methods, only that you have 5 backups for one method, maybe. Yup. Steve |
#15
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![]() Steven Shelikoff wrote: On Thu, 17 Jun 2004 05:00:28 GMT, otnmbrd wrote: Steven Shelikoff wrote: Where's Jim Donahue when ya need him? http://www.defensedaily.com/cgi/av/s...ontimeon.h tm Steve About 4 years ago, my industry (Marine) "sources" started saying that we should not count Loran out, and that plans were beginning to be formulated to update/upgrade the system. To be honest, my reaction, though positive, was not too optimistic. It's nice to read that this is still being considered, though if it does come to pass, I would also hope that they figure out how to increase range and coverage. I don't think there are plans to increase the range and coverage to include, for instance, mid ocean. The plans are to greatly increase the accuracy and to make LORAN a backup stratum 1 time source. That's good for several industries, like cellphones, broadcasters, etc. As long as it covers the coast out to around a few hundred miles, that's good enough for 99.999% of boaters. You usually don't need ot know *exactly* where you are when you're hundreds of miles from anywhere. I got the sense (sources) that they were at least contemplating some increased coverage but most mid-oceans would still not apply. This makes Loran only a limited backup/second source system, as G there are many more areas to the world, than just the US, that could benefit. otn |
#16
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"Jim Donohue" writes:
The thought that LORAN has some role as a backup to GPS in a military jamming situation is pretty close to ludicrous. You really think the electronic warfare guys are not going toimpact long wave? Yes, that's what I think. GPS is useful in a military situation because provides extremely high accuracy. Thus selective availability -- the ability to remove that pinpoint accuracy on demand. Loran does not provide the accuracy of GPS, therefore is cannot serve the same military role. Thus there is no militarily-related reason to jam Loran. You think LORAN is resistive of jamming? No. What I think is there is no reason why the military would want to. --lyndon |
#17
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On Thu, 17 Jun 2004 05:00:28 GMT, otnmbrd
wrote: Only a fool goes offshore/deepsea for extended voyages, with one single navigation method available ..... and six GPS receivers does not mean you have six methods, only that you have 5 backups for one method, maybe. Exactly why I carry two GPSes (one for boat, one for Zodiac), a bulkhead compass, a pelorus (with angles discreetly placed in tape on coamings), a stopwatch, a depthfinder, current paper charts with Notices to Mariners, cruising guides as needed and am looking for an old sextant to teach myself celestial. And I cruise the Great Lakes G. LORAN is obviously less popular, but the older guys still have working sets and even RDF isn't extinct.,,although I have no idea if it works unless you are line of sight to an airport, say. Overkill? Maybe, but my pilotage is pretty sharp, and I can do running fixes, DR and LOPs and ETAs without firing up the GPS, just a few neurons. Neither night nor fog bother me if I can get a visual fix occasionally, which will serve us well when we go offshore, as will learning celestial. I believe the more familiar and practised one is with a variety of techniques, the calmer and more pleasurable the sail. Half of "feel" is just internalized technique and "sea sense" is no exception. R. |
#18
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On Thu, 17 Jun 2004 05:00:28 GMT, otnmbrd
wrote: snip Only a fool goes offshore/deepsea for extended voyages, with one single navigation method available ..... and six GPS receivers does not mean you have six methods, only that you have 5 backups for one method, maybe. ah....but if you're in the middle of nowhere and; even if your backup GPS is functional, but GPS is down; you're better off staying where you are...even if you don't know where that is. |
#19
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![]() Horace Brownbag wrote: On Thu, 17 Jun 2004 05:00:28 GMT, otnmbrd wrote: snip Only a fool goes offshore/deepsea for extended voyages, with one single navigation method available ..... and six GPS receivers does not mean you have six methods, only that you have 5 backups for one method, maybe. ah....but if you're in the middle of nowhere and; even if your backup GPS is functional, but GPS is down; you're better off staying where you are...even if you don't know where that is. ah.... but if you have the ability to use other methods, not related to GPS, there's no need to stay where you are, unless they too are down. otn |
#20
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On Thu, 17 Jun 2004 20:38:20 GMT, otnmbrd
wrote: Horace Brownbag wrote: On Thu, 17 Jun 2004 05:00:28 GMT, otnmbrd wrote: snip Only a fool goes offshore/deepsea for extended voyages, with one single navigation method available ..... and six GPS receivers does not mean you have six methods, only that you have 5 backups for one method, maybe. ah....but if you're in the middle of nowhere and; even if your backup GPS is functional, but GPS is down; you're better off staying where you are...even if you don't know where that is. ah.... but if you have the ability to use other methods, not related to GPS, there's no need to stay where you are, unless they too are down. I was in an accelerated nursing program once. Git yer BSN in 1 year; no sleep; pre-reqs required. I'm in my, what was an equivalent to 2nd year student, and in the 1-1 debriefing I was doing with my instructor regarding the status of my patient for the day, I go through the guy's vitals...heart rate and rthymn, temp., other stuff to show we've read the text, and used our heads. She interupts my report to ask a question, as expected, if something wasn't clear. "What's 'normal' body temperature?" "Huh?"...I just didn't get this. I asked for clarification. "What do you mean...?" "What is the normal body temperature of an averge person?" "Really?" "Yes." "Really?"...but she gave that look that said she wasn't going to budge. This was too much for me. I said, "I hate to be insulting, but I learned that in elementary school. I think most people have. I remember it being repeated, and repeated throughout the grades through high school. I'm in the second year equivalent of an accelerated program. My classmates and I didn't 'just fall off the turnip truck'." "If you have to ask me; and I didn't know what the generally considered human body temp is; at this stage of the game...we've got some very serious problems with the system that put us here in the hallway." |
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