lustyd
Well-Known Member
So you don't accept first hand experience of a GPS unit stating a location many miles from where you are? I've experienced it with a Garmin 152 GPS - the plotted course blipped and put us at the top of Portsdown hill ... a little tricky in a 30'er with a 6' keel ...
Blimey, how much did the repairs cost? Or did you just stop driving the boat when you saw the green/brown/grey bit approaching? I don't doubt that GPS can go wrong, and I don't doubt that people can and will get lost because of it. What I do strongly doubt, however, is whether many boats will actually hit the land as a result. Even with absolutely no nav equipment on board it's possible to safely get the boat somewhere to stop by just following the coast until you see a harbour and then following the buoys or another boat, or absolute worst case by going slow as heck and using a lead line to find a channel. You don't need to know which harbour it is, what ocean you're on or even which way is north.
It's also worth highlighting to some on here to avoid unnecessary worry (and counteract the panic inducing posts about the end of the world following tech failure) that the vast majority of boats actually just know where they are and where they are going, with a tiny percentage venturing outside home waters. Those going outside of home waters will likely plan for GPS failure in one way or another, even if that just means carrying charts and logging GPS positions in a notebook without doing traditional nav. For most of us, this just simply isn't dangerous enough to worry about, and I include in that number myself on a trip to the Isle of Man in a couple of weeks from Scotland - I'd be more than happy to lose GPS and still feel I could get there safely.
All that said though, it's nice to know it's going on and I suspect that quite a few on here may plan a little more as a result.