Always trust your charts???

Daydream believer

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My point is that the echo sounder and your eyes while your mosey around don’t lie. Just do it cautiously in shallow waters.
6.1 M? That is not shallow. That much water would frighten the life out of some east coast Thames estuary sailors. Anything that they cannot touch with a bamboo cane would be a no no:rolleyes:
:D
 

Fr J Hackett

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I like the way the reefs are shown with sharp teeth. 😁

To answer Daydream believer it also works the other way around, I moved from the blue and deep water of the SW to the brown and shallow waters of the east coast and in the 3 years I was there I never felt completely happy sailing with half a meter and less under my keel or finding my way across the Thames Estuary ( eternally grateful for the Wonderfull work crossing the Thames Estuary)
 

dunedin

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Surely most people in these areas work also by Google Earth, due to the frequency of chart datum and location errors?

Mind you coming down the West side of Hoy last week it was noticeable that 2/3rds of the coastline on the latest UKHO chart stIll shows it simple as white and “unsurveyed” - and that is one of the high traffic areas and the lee shore for a regular ferry route.
 

john_morris_uk

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Surely most people in these areas work also by Google Earth, due to the frequency of chart datum and location errors?

Mind you coming down the West side of Hoy last week it was noticeable that 2/3rds of the coastline on the latest UKHO chart stIll shows it simple as white and “unsurveyed” - and that is one of the high traffic areas and the lee shore for a regular ferry route.
The vast majority of the worlds seas and oceans are very poorly surveyed. We are spoiled in home waters as most is surveyed accurately and updated reasonably frequently.

However even in UK waters and in non commercially or military sensitive areas; who’s paying for the survey?
 

RunAgroundHard

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I participate in a Raymarine forum and a similar comment was made about Navionics, except the person had run aground because it was a lot shallower than than the electronic chart suggested. They may have been using autoroute as well, can't remember. All charts, as suggested by others, will contain errors, navigator due diligence and all that. Is the GPS position correct?
 

john_morris_uk

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I participate in a Raymarine forum and a similar comment was made about Navionics, except the person had run aground because it was a lot shallower than than the electronic chart suggested. They may have been using autoroute as well, can't remember. All charts, as suggested by others, will contain errors, navigator due diligence and all that. Is the GPS position correct?
What’s correct? What datum?
 

Roberto

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I looked quickly at the available charts (to hydrographic standards) for the areas, they seem to be drawn at scales between 1:20 000 and 1 : 50 000 (?); Anyway, whatever actual figures, 1/20 000 means 1mm = 20m, the hydrographic "half pencil width" would be 10m, the trace on the chart cannot be more detailed than that, or 25m if 1/50 000 scale.
On my PC screen the image above has a scale (bottom right) of 126ft/2.4cm, that is 15 real meters equal 1 *centimeter* on my screen. Of course to be adjusted to the size of the actual display. On my screen the boat position could be anywhere in a radius of 1-2cm (depending upon original scale) around the plotted cross.
Add to that, those charts are probably CATZOC B (at best), which means an horizontal position error of +-50m.
One of the fundamental failings of leisure electronic charting (mostly commercially driven), allowing "overzooming" without warning + not indicating the CATZOC margin of error: a "serious" electronic chart system would have told you "careful there is a margin of error of 50-75-100m as to your position related to this chart", but then they would not be able to sell charts of North Korea with 50cm spaced contours :)
 

john_morris_uk

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I looked quickly at the available charts (to hydrographic standards) for the areas, they seem to be drawn at scales between 1:20 000 and 1 : 50 000 (?); Anyway, whatever actual figures, 1/20 000 means 1mm = 20m, the hydrographic "half pencil width" would be 10m, the trace on the chart cannot be more detailed than that, or 25m if 1/50 000 scale.
On my PC screen the image above has a scale (bottom right) of 126ft/2.4cm, that is 15 real meters equal 1 *centimeter* on my screen. Of course to be adjusted to the size of the actual display. On my screen the boat position could be anywhere in a radius of 1-2cm (depending upon original scale) around the plotted cross.
Add to that, those charts are probably CATZOC B (at best), which means an horizontal position error of +-50m.
One of the fundamental failings of leisure electronic charting (mostly commercially driven), allowing "overzooming" without warning + not indicating the CATZOC margin of error: a "serious" electronic chart system would have told you "careful there is a margin of error of 50-75-100m as to your position related to this chart", but then they would not be able to sell charts of North Korea with 50cm spaced contours :)
You sum it up very nicely. Too many European sailors get used to the amazingly high standards of accuracy of most home waters charting. They then start to hit things when they go further afield.

I’m not immune. When we were exploring this anchorage we were going very very slowly looking for a free space whilst watching the echo sounder carefully. 5 metres became gentle crunch in a moment. The water is so clear you can’t judge depth with any great confidence by simply looking. The charting is up the creek bug a top tip is to use Google Earth as s cross reference.
 

Roberto

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I’m not immune.
I think no one is, when one has the chance of zooming in in in, why not, the machine should tell "careful that's too much".
Electronic charting devices made this way are nocuments to navigation, not aids imho. (I rushed to check if the nocument word exists in English and it seems so, even if archaic obsolete etc etc).
 

Stingo

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I think no one is, when one has the chance of zooming in in in, why not, the machine should tell "careful that's too much".
Electronic charting devices made this way are nocuments to navigation, not aids imho. (I rushed to check if the nocument word exists in English and it seems so, even if archaic obsolete etc etc).
I had to look the word up because I've never heard it.
Screenshot_20230527-222710_English.jpg
 

Giblets

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You sum it up very nicely. Too many European sailors get used to the amazingly high standards of accuracy of most home waters charting. They then start to hit things when they go further afield.

I’m not immune. When we were exploring this anchorage we were going very very slowly looking for a free space whilst watching the echo sounder carefully. 5 metres became gentle crunch in a moment. The water is so clear you can’t judge depth with any great confidence by simply looking. The charting is up the creek bug a top tip is to use Google Earth as s cross reference.
John, do you not have a lead line on board your trusty vessel? I'm a firm believer in the Mk 1 eyeball plus a bit of weighted string in unfamiliar close quarters situations. :cool:
 
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