Elessar
Well-Known Member
It does not matter.
What matters is that everyone on the boat knows what the sounder is telling them.
remains the best answer.
It does not matter.
What matters is that everyone on the boat knows what the sounder is telling them.
Depth of water, kind of more intuitive for me, it says I have 3.5m and I know I run aground at 1.4m cos that's my draft. Also depth alarm doesn't work below 1m and Granay reach never has more than 1m under the keel. When I had it set to depth under keel I had to keep working out whether that was actual water depth or under keel depth.
It wasn't until I read this post that I realised why it's so easy with depth of water! Everyone had been talking about maths and I assumed I did it subconsiously but you're right, I'm in trouble when it says my draft so no maths required!
Reasons for knowing depth under keel: to avoid hitting the bottom.
Reasons for knowing the depth of water: to calculate anchor scope; to get a position line from soundings.
Prefer depth of water when in cruising mode. Makes it easier to follow depth contours etc, plus anchor chain requirements.
Prefer depth below keel in race mode. Makes it easier when you're short tacking up the shore.
Mine reads depth under keel plus a small safety margin. The boat draws 2 metres, with the transducer about 400mm immersed. I put in an offset of 2 metres. The fun started in the shallow channel which can be used as a shortcut to Bozburun. In places the water is less than 3 metres deep in the centre of the channel. When I put the new instruments in one of them set the offset into the transducer, the other one set an offset in the instrument itself, effectively doubling the offset. It made for a very interesting run through the channel until I realised what was going on.
Didn't you check it after setting it up? Quite an expensive assumption to get wrong!
I was in the process of checking the entire setup, which is a complex one with multiple instruments. It was in fact a totally safe error, as the instrument showing the wrong depth was effectively treating the boat as having a 4 metre draught. I knew that I had put a 2 metre offset into the transducer and had checked the instrument I normally use for depth readings with a lead line whilst tied up to a jetty, so knew it was accurate. I had previously put a 2 metre offset into the other instrument, and forgotten to cancel it. In the channel I had both instruments switched to depth mode for the first time. The one with the double offset counted down to zero. It was the one I was watching because it was showing the least depth, but I know the channel and knew that I had not even reached the shallow bit so I just carried on, and then realised that the other instrument was showing correct depth, which in the shallowest part of the channel recorded less than half a metre below my offset, in other words a water depth of about 2.8 metres.
Mine reads depth under keel plus a small safety margin. The boat draws 2 metres, with the transducer about 400mm immersed. I put in an offset of 2 metres. The fun started in the shallow channel which can be used as a shortcut to Bozburun. In places the water is less than 3 metres deep in the centre of the channel. When I put the new instruments in one of them set the offset into the transducer, the other one set an offset in the instrument itself, effectively doubling the offset. It made for a very interesting run through the channel until I realised what was going on.
remains the best answer.
Quote Originally Posted by lw395
It does not matter.
What matters is that everyone on the boat knows what the sounder is telling them.
remains the best answer.
Could that be because I learned this the hardest way?
I admit nothing!
seriously though, these days we have instruments that tell us true and apparent wind at the touch of a button, with words on the dsplay to explain.
I have yet to see a sounder which tells me 'under keel' or 'total depth', maybe I sail boats that are out of date?
YAPP please Angus?
Tee hee. We need a super electronic gadget that looks up the astronomical tidal predictions, superimposes a factor for air pressure then looks at wind direction to factor that in.
Then we could display charted depth. Means we dont have to do maths if choosing not to use one of the 6 GPSs we have on board.
Obvious really![]()