Ric
Well-Known Member
The magnetic compass at the wheel of my boat needs replacing. The cost of a new one is not far short of a Raymarine A65 MFD repeater. One of the views available on the Raymarine A65 is an electronic compass rose linked to the ships flux gate compass and GPS, and with overlays showing wind, tide, and drift (a marine equivalent of what is called a horizontal situation indicator in aviation). Moreover, it can also display (in other views) radar, sounder, charts etc. Altogether far more useful at the helm than a wobbly magnetic compass.
I therefore thinking of abandoning a compass at the helm (I'll still have a handheld compass for the unlikely event of total emergency electrical failure).
Aviation has largely abandoned magnetic compasses and they are only retained for dire emergencies - in the business jet I fly for a living the magnetic compass is tiny, tucked away at the top of the instrument panel, and only works if there is total electrical failure because the electric windscreen heating and other electrical systems have to be off. So why do boats still have a huge compass dominating the helm?
Has anybody else simply abandoned a compass at the helm?
I therefore thinking of abandoning a compass at the helm (I'll still have a handheld compass for the unlikely event of total emergency electrical failure).
Aviation has largely abandoned magnetic compasses and they are only retained for dire emergencies - in the business jet I fly for a living the magnetic compass is tiny, tucked away at the top of the instrument panel, and only works if there is total electrical failure because the electric windscreen heating and other electrical systems have to be off. So why do boats still have a huge compass dominating the helm?
Has anybody else simply abandoned a compass at the helm?