Danny Jo
Well-Known Member
Freestyle was lifted yesterday to have her keel sandblasted and primed. To cut a long story short, the crane destroyed the cover of the GPS antenna, which is mounted at the stern on the radar pole.
No problem, you might say, just get another one. Well yes, there is a problem - the antenna feeds a Phillips AP Navigator of circa 1985 vintage, a wonderful machine that has for some years been considered obsolete. (Not to me, it isn't, because it is nicely interfaced with an extensive set of B&G instruments, and I don't even want to ask whether a modern GPS or chartplotter will interface with a 21 year old B&G processor - also no-one has shown me a modern machine into which I can enter waypoints as quickly as I can into the AP Navigator - but I'm drifting off the point.)
What I can see of the antenna now that the cover has gone are four wires pointing upwards in short spirals. It still works, but is not of course weather-proof.
Is there such a thing as a generic GPS antenna that I could connect to my AP Navigator? I had imagined that the antenna was just that, an antenna, with all the fancy circuitry located inboard on the AP Navigator. But Googling just gives me loads of things going by the name of a GPS antenna which are actually the whole works, outputting position data in NMEA format.
The technical boffins will by now have realised that I know precious little about GPS. The ideal solution would be to find someone with an old AP Navigator antenna that they no longer use. Failing that, any other ideas?
No problem, you might say, just get another one. Well yes, there is a problem - the antenna feeds a Phillips AP Navigator of circa 1985 vintage, a wonderful machine that has for some years been considered obsolete. (Not to me, it isn't, because it is nicely interfaced with an extensive set of B&G instruments, and I don't even want to ask whether a modern GPS or chartplotter will interface with a 21 year old B&G processor - also no-one has shown me a modern machine into which I can enter waypoints as quickly as I can into the AP Navigator - but I'm drifting off the point.)
What I can see of the antenna now that the cover has gone are four wires pointing upwards in short spirals. It still works, but is not of course weather-proof.
Is there such a thing as a generic GPS antenna that I could connect to my AP Navigator? I had imagined that the antenna was just that, an antenna, with all the fancy circuitry located inboard on the AP Navigator. But Googling just gives me loads of things going by the name of a GPS antenna which are actually the whole works, outputting position data in NMEA format.
The technical boffins will by now have realised that I know precious little about GPS. The ideal solution would be to find someone with an old AP Navigator antenna that they no longer use. Failing that, any other ideas?