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![]() As one who also takes sailing seriously, I tend to agree except for the fact that the company which owns the ship dictates how many are on the bridge at any given tims. If one were to have a fully manned bridge with similar electronics it would be much safer than a similar bridge with no electronics, as history shows. It is the simple hunt for the almighty corporate dollar that makes for such situations, not the presence of intigrated systems. "Simple Simon" wrote in message ... The trouble with one man bridge operation (OMB0) on large ships is one man cannot possibly pay enough attention all the time he's on watch. Rather than making navigation safer these integrated bridge systems (IBS) make it more dangerous. You can have an IBS costing in the millions and still the weak link in the chain is the human factor. OMBO exists for one reason and one reason only - to save the shipping company money by cutting vital personnel. As demonstrated here in this very group by people such as otnmbrd, Shen44 and Jeff Morris the weak link can be weak indeed. Increased safety, increased cost-saving and increased efficiency in navigation are the major concerns for all vessels so Furuno sells systems that make Furuno lots of money but actually make navigation more dangerous because Furuno doesn't recognize the weak link in the system - the Ocean Master. S.Simon (A Captain who takes sailing seriously) references: http://www.furuno.co.jp/english/mari...r/voyager.html |