T
timbartlett
Guest
Richard 10002 has given a pretty good explanation of why altering course to port is prohibited under Rule17.Yep, if the ship was going to change direction, it would have done it far before I got just a few hundred yards from it. I'm always on auto, so mostly going in a straight line. Maybe some ships, from miles away, changed course a bit, but I would not have known about them. Always we'd be on the fly, with the radar be low.
Haydn , I think your action is only the final option.
If you can just think about it, its just so obvious..........
Tim says the ships are giving way to us from 6-4 nm away, and altering course @ 4 miles away then I reckon they are out of our sight.
Yep suppose I could have picked them up on my radar, if downstairs. But was nearly always upstairs. Boat always on Track, auto pilot.
So tracking a straight line from say Plymouth to CI's.
How come the buggers come to attack me from my left. if Tim says they have 6/4 miles to change course, how come they are still all facing me.
I always think of a collision situation in four phases:
1: no risk of collision -- both vessels free to manoeuvre at will
2: risk of collision established -- stand on vessel must stand on, give way vessel must give way
3: risk of collision, but inadequate action by give way vessel, stand on vessel may alter course to starboard or change speed
4: collision inevitable unless stand on vessel takes action: action by stand on vessel is mandatory, including the option of altering course to port.
The crux of the matter is when do we enter each phase.
As Benjenbav says, Legal precedent suggests that there is no risk of collision beyond six miles.
When a ship is within six miles, it may be very difficult to observe a change of bearing until the ship is quite close. Rule 7 says that Risk shall be deemed to exist if the compass bearing of a vessel does not appreciably change.
So I'm inclined to say that -- in open water, we move into Phase 2 at about 6 miles
IMHO, we cannot then take legitimate avoiding action until it is obvious that the other vessel is not taking adequate action. In open water, I might start feeling concerned about an approaching ship at about 2 miles, but remember that a <12m sailing boat's nav lights are only required to be visible for 1 mile -- and as a ship cannot be expected to give way to a vessel it cannot see, I suggest that the boundary between phase 2-3 is at about 1-2 miles.
The last phase is when the give way vessel has left it too late to manoevre. Cockroft and Lameijer suggests that Phase 4 begins at 12x your own vessel lengths. This is illogical, because the distance at which the other vessel has left it too late to manoeuvre is connected with the other vessel's characteristics, not yours --- but it's a good indicator of what is being taught/examined in nautical college. And translated down to "about 120 metres" it seems to me to be perfectly reasonable.
For comparison, Cockroft and Lameijer give these figures (for ship-ship encounters):-
Outer Limit of stage 2...... 5-8 mile
Outer Limit of stage 3...... 2-3 mile
Outer Limit of stage 4...... 12 own-ship lengths
I bet when you alter course to avoid a ship approaching from your starboard side, you "aim for his stern", and then follow his stern round until you are back on course. If so, then of course you are "facing him". Why be surprised when he does the same?how come they are still all facing me.
PS. MAIB reports (almost by definition) only yell us about incidents where something has gone wrong. But the report into the Wahkuna collision, for instance, refers to evidence from the ships voyage data recorder which showed that the ship had previously altered course to avoid another small radar contact at a range of 4-5 miles. Wahkuna was also seen on radar at 5-6 miles, but appeared (at that stage) to be passing clear.
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