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#1
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I've finally had it with my old radar.
It still works, after taking what seems like about five minutes for the tube to warm up. The display is fine, as long as it isn't daytime. During the daytime, you have to look through a rubber "mask" that blocks out ambient light- and also prevents you from seeing anything else *except* the radar screen. The unit has been hanging from the headliner just about an inch and a half too high for comfortable viewing through the mask, so standing on tip-toe has long been a part of my radar routine. The CRT display monitor is as big as a bread box, blocking vision to an unneccesary degree even when radar isn't running (I run with it off most of the time). So this afternoon the whole shooting match was dismounted. It's off to the second hand marine consignment store with my Raytheon 2600 "Manufacture date, October 1981". I hope to get $300 for it, but will probably have to take less. The next owner will appreciate that I disconnected the wiring harness at both ends *and* have the original Raytheon book and schematics illustrating where all the connections should be remade. RayMarine has a pretty god deal on the C-70 radar pack right now. I thought the C-70 might have too small a display, but I borrowed a full size graphic from the dealer to take over to the boat and see. Turns out the screen is just as big as the screen on the Simrad CP33 plotter- which has never seemed too small and is about 2-feet farther away than where the radar will mount. The new unit won't require all the fiddling and twiddling with "sea state" and "gain" knobs and will allow computerized target tracking and other advanced features the oldie but goodie never dreamed of. The C-70 can function as a full feature nav system, display AIS targets, hook up to a dpeth sounder, and much more. I have decided just to use mine for radar. Already have a sounder, and I don't want to put all my eggs into a single electronic basket. I'm keeping the Simrad CP33, so if the radar monitor craps out I will still have a GPS plotter working. (Using the entire screen for radar image also mitigates fears of the image being too small- splitting a screen that small for 2-3 simultaneous displays may not be such a hot idea). My most common nav tool remains the paper chart- but you can't beat a plotter for confirming whether you are where you think you are on that chart and you can't beat radar for seeing (and being seen) in dark or foggy conditions. I'll be installing the C-70 this week. The only tough part is adhering to my standard practice of buying from a local independent supplier whenever possible. My source has to pay more for Raymarine than I can buy it, retail, at one of the largest marine supply stores in the country. grumble, grumble, grumble, grumble.........at least standing on priciple is only going to cost a couple of hundred bucks this time around. :-) |
#2
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On Sun, 30 Sep 2007 20:39:11 -0700, Chuck Gould
wrote: RayMarine has a pretty god deal on the C-70 radar pack right now. You will like it - it's a good unit. |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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Chuck Gould wrote:
I've finally had it with my old radar. It still works, after taking what seems like about five minutes for the tube to warm up. The display is fine, as long as it isn't daytime. During the daytime, you have to look through a rubber "mask" that blocks out ambient light- and also prevents you from seeing anything else *except* the radar screen. The unit has been hanging from the headliner just about an inch and a half too high for comfortable viewing through the mask, so standing on tip-toe has long been a part of my radar routine. The CRT display monitor is as big as a bread box, blocking vision to an unneccesary degree even when radar isn't running (I run with it off most of the time). So this afternoon the whole shooting match was dismounted. It's off to the second hand marine consignment store with my Raytheon 2600 "Manufacture date, October 1981". I hope to get $300 for it, but will probably have to take less. The next owner will appreciate that I disconnected the wiring harness at both ends *and* have the original Raytheon book and schematics illustrating where all the connections should be remade. RayMarine has a pretty god deal on the C-70 radar pack right now. Hope you are paying less than $2200 for the C70 with the radome. |
#4
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posted to rec.boats
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On Sep 30, 8:39?pm, Chuck Gould wrote:
I've finally had it with my old radar. It still works, after taking what seems like about five minutes for the tube to warm up. The display is fine, as long as it isn't daytime. During the daytime, you have to look through a rubber "mask" that blocks out ambient light- and also prevents you from seeing anything else *except* the radar screen. The unit has been hanging from the headliner just about an inch and a half too high for comfortable viewing through the mask, so standing on tip-toe has long been a part of my radar routine. The CRT display monitor is as big as a bread box, blocking vision to an unneccesary degree even when radar isn't running (I run with it off most of the time). So this afternoon the whole shooting match was dismounted. It's off to the second hand marine consignment store with my Raytheon 2600 "Manufacture date, October 1981". I hope to get $300 for it, but will probably have to take less. The next owner will appreciate that I disconnected the wiring harness at both ends *and* have the original Raytheon book and schematics illustrating where all the connections should be remade. RayMarine has a pretty god deal on the C-70 radar pack right now. I thought the C-70 might have too small a display, but I borrowed a full size graphic from the dealer to take over to the boat and see. Turns out the screen is just as big as the screen on the Simrad CP33 plotter- which has never seemed too small and is about 2-feet farther away than where the radar will mount. The new unit won't require all the fiddling and twiddling with "sea state" and "gain" knobs and will allow computerized target tracking and other advanced features the oldie but goodie never dreamed of. The C-70 can function as a full feature nav system, display AIS targets, hook up to a dpeth sounder, and much more. I have decided just to use mine for radar. Already have a sounder, and I don't want to put all my eggs into a single electronic basket. I'm keeping the Simrad CP33, so if the radar monitor craps out I will still have a GPS plotter working. (Using the entire screen for radar image also mitigates fears of the image being too small- splitting a screen that small for 2-3 simultaneous displays may not be such a hot idea). My most common nav tool remains the paper chart- but you can't beat a plotter for confirming whether you are where you think you are on that chart and you can't beat radar for seeing (and being seen) in dark or foggy conditions. I'll be installing the C-70 this week. The only tough part is adhering to my standard practice of buying from a local independent supplier whenever possible. My source has to pay more for Raymarine than I can buy it, retail, at one of the largest marine supply stores in the country. grumble, grumble, grumble, grumble.........at least standing on priciple is only going to cost a couple of hundred bucks this time around. :-) And there I was, packing my Ratheon 2600 into our local marine consignment shop, when I got stopped at the door. "Hey, Chuck! I hope you're not planning to bring that thing in here!" "What do mean, 'that thing'? It's a perfectly good 1981 model Raytheon 2600 CRT radar. Top of the line in its day. Here's the wiring harness along with the original manual and schematic that shows how to hook everything up. I'm willing to certify in writing that it was working when I took it off my boat." "Yeah, yeah. But we can't even give those things away. We'd be lucky to sell it in a year. You can put it in the "free" bin if you want to- somebody might fish it out for parts or something, but we won't use up any shelf space trying to sell it. Nobody wants those old CRT units." Some guy standing in line buys odd looking stuff to apply to the outside of a bizarre car he's building (calls it an "art car").....he is a sign painter and offers to trade me some sign work for the whole works. But I don't need a sign............ Hey- it may be old an antiquated, but it still works about as well as it was ever designed to. I'm at an age where there's a whole lot more livin' behind me than there could possibly be ahead of me, so it's a bit distressing to hear something that was quite the item in its day dissed so mercilessly and cast out upon the nearest scrap heap. Craigs list, here I come. Check that----- here the radar comes. :-) |
#5
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posted to rec.boats
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On Sun, 30 Sep 2007 20:39:11 -0700, Chuck Gould
wrote: RayMarine has a pretty god deal on the C-70 radar pack right now. I thought the C-70 might have too small a display, but I borrowed a full size graphic from the dealer to take over to the boat and see. I'm a bit of a Furuno bigot but virtually any new radar will run circles around a unit from the early 80s. Anything with electronic components has improved enormously in that time. Does it have the ARPA functions? |
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