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On Jun 15, 5:15?am, HK wrote:
Anyone publishing these? As in, $1000 chartplotters/fishfinders, six new units tested. That sort of stuff. Test them for what? To see if they work? Almost any brand of electronics will be very reliable. In general, units that don't fail in the first 90-minutes or so of use after installation can be relied upon to give so many years of service that they will ultimately be replaced due to obsolesence rather than finally wearing out. That's why there are so very few technicians that actually repair electronics- the rare warranty failures are typically resolved by swapping out an entire unit. Beyond reliability, a lot of the issues become very, very subjective. Boater A prefers a certain type of display, Boater B prefers another. Unless two units are attempting to prioritize the exact same aspects of performance and operation, doing an objective review is pretty difficult. It requires the reviewer to impose his or her *own* subjective values as a standard for comparison. For example: MagicNav Technologies new GPS/plotter might have an particularly bright display and an interface that uses only a couple of large buttons that need to be pressed in some complex combinations to perform a few dozen functions. Competing ElectroScan offers a unit with a less brilliant display, but with 17 clearly labeled (if small) push buttons that normally offer one-touch functionality. Which is "better"? Is the bright display a positive or negative? Can it bee "too bright" except during the sunniest days? Or, will two different people have two different, subjective, and equally valid opinions about the brightness? Is the 2-3 button interface a blessing for it's ease of handling in rough seas, or a serious problem because many people won't manage to remember that in order to access the page with the tide tables the sequence is L,L,C,L,R,C,R,C,R,L? There would be opinions on either side of the question. Is the 17 button interface better because it's more easily used, or worse because when the boat is bouncing around the smaller buttons are hard to press with a high degree of accuracy? Is one unit better for people who are boating offshore in daylight hours only, the other a superior choice for people who boat on inland lakes and launch before sunrise to take advantage of the early morning bite? Or. will there be boaters in both of those categories who might choose either of the units for subjective reasons that are personally valid? Which one should the reviewer "knock"? Which one *can* the reviewer knock without imposing his or her own subjective preferences as some sort of universal standard? Reliability has to be removed from the equation as well as basically untestable. Effective testing would require leaving something running for up to several years to note when it finally failed, and to be thorough several copies of each model would need to be operated to be sure that an early failure or a ridiculously long service life wasn't a one-unit anomaly. Because the choice of boating equipment is so extremely subjective, head-to-head comparisons are a lot less useful than descriptions of individual products that include a hgihlight of the major features and what the associated benfits or operating characteristics might be. It then falls to the reader to decide whether a particular product would be suitable for consideration when shopping for items of that type, or not. A product with characteristics, features, and functions that are inconsistent with what a boater wants for his personal boating experience is always a poor choice, no matter how well it may have been manufactured, the corporate reputation, the length of the warranty, or whether it impressed somebody else. |
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