OK time for me to weigh in I have no GPS and the last nav aid I owned was loran 
C. I believe that GPS is a great option and an asset for most but if you do not 
know DR you can and most likely will get into trouble. As nice of an aid as 
they are nothing can replace good old seamanship! I only say this since we do 
have a few new sailors on this talkring and would like to see what they can add 
in the future so by all means get a GPS but also know dead reckoning it could 
save you allot of headaches or worse Phil is correct that some companies will 
use maps instead of charts witch is not that big of a deal on the S.F Bay but 
should you get close to the east side there are alot of shoals and shallows not 
to mention old piers and sunken boats. In other words you don't always get what 
is advertised best of luck in your hunt for a GPS.


From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]: [EMAIL PROTECTED]: RE: catalina27-talk: GPSDate: Fri, 
14 Dec 2007 13:54:52 -0800




I tend to get on a rant when it comes to GPS. They are not all created the same 
and it appears the most popular are the worst functionality wise and many 
models represent an actual hazard to mariners. The GPS suppliers get a little 
cagey by making up terminology regarding what they supply that they get to 
define reality leaving any collisions with uncharted islands the mariners fault.
 
So what do I have and where is it mounted. Mine is a Standard Horizon CP150 (no 
longer available, as far as I can tell) on a fixed mount at the wheel. The 
current low end is a CP180. Since it runs in either north up or forward up 
modes have it fixed gets very handy. I know it’s a tiller boat question, so I’d 
say the bulkhead.
 
The caveat mariners ran into in the past was the source of the charts supplied 
in the non-marine professional marine GPS units was from a map database not a 
chart database. They determined position with good accuracy, did waypoints 
fine, would leave electronic bread crumbs, and would direct you home down the 
return path. When I warned Nicky, an avid ocean small boat angler, on a Friday 
afternoon about his new Garmin GPS on his new boat he scoffed (Nicky was a 
younger bright engineer at Intel) but on Tuesday he was a little more humble. 
Nicky tore the I/O drive out of his new boat Saturday. He set electronic bread 
crumbs at high tide on the way out as he passed over a line of rocks that would 
be shoaling rocks at low tide. On the way back in the uncharted (uncharted on 
his, charted on mine) rocks waited for him just under the surface.
 
When I taught an intro to navigation Nicky’s plight was always included. I also 
included the story of three boats that didn’t want to hang with the main group 
of boats on a whale watch cruise out of Monterey, CA. They chose to sneak off 
to Stillwater Cover in Carmel, lost track of time and returned well after dark. 
All three skippers were running without charts and guessing their position by 
shore lights. When asked they said it was no big deal and estimated they were a 
good half mile offshore.
 
The good news is they all three made it back the bad news is their path took 
them in close proximity to a rock pinnacle that shoals a half mile off shore at 
low tide. It’s like 50 feet wide at its base and 70 tall and only about 8 feet 
in diameter when it breaks the surface. It’s not on any map based GPS. Map 
based GPS units besides missing all depth data only show obstructions big 
enough to contain a road.
 
The fun one around SF Bay was to have them look for Alcatraz Island. Not there! 
After some years is was added so I had them look for Red Rocks, again not 
there. Actually there literally dozens of un-mapped hazards on SF bay that are 
clearly charted on the real charts.
 
Besides a true marine GPS having charts, some of them are using a chart 
database and not just a chart image. My GPS, and I would assume the newer 
Standard Horizon GPS units as well, can have an alarm set for depth out in 
front of the boat. Yes while you’re giving instructions on the next tack it is 
looking at its internal chart database and based on the depth and distance you 
preset will sound an alarm before you reach the obstruction. 
 
A chart reading forward looking alarm beats the heck out a dumb straight down 
depth alarm. In the case of the rock pinnacle you’d be telling your wife to 
grab the ditch bag if you relied on a dumb straight down depth alarm.
 
It’s also pretty important since my GPS will directly send command to my 
Autohelm. The more automated things get the more you can do but the less 
oversight actually goes on. Here’s automation that checks my work even when I 
get tired. 
 
Another feature on Standard Horizon GPS units is they interface directly with 
your Standard Horizon DSC VHF. When you hit the digital Mayday key on the VHF 
it automatically sends your ID, GPS location, and type of emergency. Actually 
most any GPS with a NEMA0183 interface can do that, but on my boat if I receive 
a DSC mayday is automatically plotted on my GPS as a waypoint and highlighted. 
Before I even pick up the Ram Mic to reply I can plot a course and estimate an 
arrival time on scene in the GPS.
 
Don’t you wish the CG had just bought the right GPS and radio combo back in the 
90s instead of the system we are all still waiting to see deployed beyond a few 
test zones? Wow for under a $1000 they can receive a DSC distress signal and 
plot it’s position without human intervention and head directly there.
 
To review GPS is good, the right one will save your life, making it great. 

Fixed mount trumps hand held so the display can be used forward as up. It helps 
keep you oriented correctly when fatigued in low light.
GPS must be chart based, showing water depth, and submerged obstructions. How 
about a field of submerged dols?
A great GPS can use chart data to sound an alarm on depth in your path.
A great GPS will plot distress calls automatically so we can assist mariners in 
distress, when we are in a position to do so. 
 
My brother was a real Garmin fan but when he prepped his IP38 for Mexico I made 
him a custom mount for a CP150 at the wheel. It was still performing flawlessly 
after a year when I joined him in Cabo for the bash up to San Diego. I used it 
to steer around sea mounts coming up the coast and we logged a consistently 
smother passage than the boats we were traveling with us who ran straight 
lines.  So yes at the wheel not down below.
 
Ok, but I did warn you about the rant. I’m not saying it must be Standard 
Horizon, but don’t buy a unit with less features today than the one I mounted 
in ten years ago. And don’t trust a salesman; have him show you the features. 
It’s your boat and you’ll be the one out there when things go wrong.   
 

Phil Agur                              s/v Wing Tip
Secretary/Treasurer     Call Sign WCW3485
IC27/270A                          MMSI 366901790 
www.catalina27.org    Vessel Doc# 1039809
 
-----Original Message-----From: [email protected] [mailto:[EMAIL 
PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]: Friday, December 14, 2007 8:49 AMTo: 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]: catalina27-talk: GPS
 
On a tiller C27, where do you all mount your GSP chartplotter ... or do you 
prefer a handheld (my family is collaborating to buy me something useful for 
Christmas rather than ......... well, I'll leave it there). Tom 
_________________________________________________________________
Don't get caught with egg on your face. Play Chicktionary!
http://club.live.com/chicktionary.aspx?icid=chick_wlhmtextlink1_dec

Reply via email to