Laptop or chartplotter?

I have a 7" SH (has been working without fault since 2008) as primary chartplotter on the cockpit and a new Samsung Tab Pro tablet with Navionics which I use at home and on the boat. Both perform very well within their own limits.
 
Why do Londonchartplotters tend to use Vista? Isn't it a bit out of date????
the london chartplotters websire says .....''Toughbooks aren't brand new but after being completely refurbished, they are always in excellent condition''
 
the london chartplotters websire says .....''Toughbooks aren't brand new but after being completely refurbished, they are always in excellent condition''

I know but they seem to go to town upgrading all the other bits, so why not have atleast XP or 7?
 
You need the plotter in the cockpit, so it has to be waterproof, so it should be a proper chartplotter. You also need to be sure it'll still work when you really need it, so it needs to be powered from the main battery bank, not from an internal battery, which again points towards a proper chartplotter. Finally, proper chartplotters are designed specifically to do the job, and are generally very good at it. In comparison, laptops are entertaining toys.
 
The problem with plotters is the planning stage when the screen is never big enough to properly view your entire route of say 70-90 NM without zooming in and out and panning. Even paper charts are better.

A laptop is still a compromise but not brilliant.

I am just trying out one of these pipo X7 units (windows based) which plugs in via an HDMI lead to our Avtex 27" TV (very low power consumption)

http://www.techradar.com/reviews/pc-mac/pc-mac-desktops/pipo-x7-1282773/review

Can be bought for about £80 combined with a usb Gps stick, Open cpn and Visit my harbour charts or CM93 charts all in around £135.

So far I have installed OPEN CPN, NavmonPC and also connected My AIS and Networked instruments all into the unit.

It is capable of connecting to the Marina wifi for E mails Web Browsing and I Player etc.

It can be driven directly from the boats 12v supply via a decent voltage stabilizer and draws less than an amp unless being worked hard.

I have also set up my old wifi router and created an adhoc network so that I can remotely control and view Open CPN with an android tablet from the cockpit using splashtop app.

There might be an easier option which is to use a bluetooth mouse/Keyboard and a dedicated additional screen in the Cockpit, Deckhouse or under the spray hood.

The biggest problem is finding a reasonable daylight viewable screen.

Small dedicated chartplotters do not have this problem

So far I have tried it and working at Home Looks good on a 42" Plotter!

No fan. No Heat minimal power consumption. Can be hidden away behind the electrical switch panel.
 
You need the plotter in the cockpit, so it has to be waterproof, so it should be a proper chartplotter. You also need to be sure it'll still work when you really need it, so it needs to be powered from the main battery bank, not from an internal battery, which again points towards a proper chartplotter. Finally, proper chartplotters are designed specifically to do the job, and are generally very good at it. In comparison, laptops are entertaining toys.

Is it not strange then how so many delivery skippers seem to travel the worlds oceans navigating with "entertaining toys" as you call them, independent reliability would be nearer the mark. To each his own!

John

Ps
Declared interest I navigate with a toughbook , chartplotters, gps x2, sextant and tables oh and sometimes with a pretty map thingy and pencils and stuff
 
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I do have a fitted plotter , but also a tablet.
The tablets sold by london chartplotters do not need a sim card or an internet connection to operate as a functioning plotter using the 'marine navigator' app included. The marine navigator app works off raster charts. I regard the tablet as my back up system. The tablet can of course be used for internet when wifi is available - or would accept a data sim .

I have also linked my tablet to the raymarine e7 plotter. Using the free 'raycontrol' app I can see the same image as the plotter on the tablet screen and also control the plotter from the tablet - all through bluetooth. Therefore the tablet makes a relatively inexpensive second station (compared to another Raymarine MFD) for use in the interior of the boat only . The tablet needs to be connected to 12volt while in use as I believe the battery life would not be great when using GPS or bluetooth, but this simply needs a 12v socket on the boat near the place you want to put the tablet. The tablet screen is useless in outdoor light.


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How did you get a hudl 2 for £99? Mine was £130. Agree its very good for the money but battery life could do with improving.
It doesn't have a SIM card or need WiFi or 4g to navigate (it would be pretty useless if it did).
I have a Garmin 600 down below, a Tescos Hudl 2 (£99 and truly awesome) with Navionics mounted in a waterproof case in the cockpit and my iPhone in waterproof case also with Navionics just in case. In addition I have my trusty Yeoman plotter down below and an extra charged up (old) iPhone in a waterproof case in my grabbag!

The trouble with tablets etc is keeping them charged up. Hudls battery life is about 35 seconds (I may exaggerate slightly) when being used full tilt as a plotter...
 
Is it not strange then how so many delivery skippers seem to travel the worlds oceans navigating with "entertaining toys" as you call them, independent reliability would be nearer the mark.

Delivery skippers never know what equipment they're going to find on a boat - or indeed whether the equipment works. That's why they need a back-up. The delivery skippers I've chatted with seem to prefer using the boat's own plotter if it works.
 
How did you get a hudl 2 for £99? Mine was £130. Agree its very good for the money but battery life could do with improving.
Tesco have regular deals on them, £10 or £20 off, and often sell refurbished ones for less.

Looks like current price is £99, but there's a code this week for new customers (open an account with a new email address) to get £20 off their first order over £100. Add a bag of sweets to your order, voila £80.

http://www.google.co.uk/search?q=hudl+hotukdeals
 
I know but they seem to go to town upgrading all the other bits, so why not have atleast XP or 7?
Because any laptop upgraded to a op system that didn't exist when it was made will run a lot slower.drivers for sound,touchscreen may not be available.
No support means no more bugs left to fix!!!
 
Until a couple of years ago I would have said I sailed without a chartplotter and have never seen the need even on long or complex passages. However I did get the Navionics app for my iPad then and found it very useful for passage planning and something to check now and again against visual input. It sits on the chart table (along with charts I'm afraid).

I just still prefer eyeballs and even in fog I'm fine with just lat and long from a GPS - which I really did find was a great step forward in the 90s.

To me, if you are happy without a screen in front of you to steer by then a tablet is a cheap way of getting most of the functionality. If you need a screen then obviously sun visible, tough and waterproof are essential.
 
Most standalone chartplotters are waterproof to 1m immersion. I have the garmin echomap 50s. Mainly bought as it was on sale at the time plus it has wifi and equivelant phone/tablet apps. What they fail to mention though is the android version of the app doesn't work so I'll have to get a cheap ipad to utilize the wifi feature. Grrr!! Their are now fully waterproof tablets that could also be used quite successfully in damp conditions.
 
I can never understand what folk have against laptop navigation. It has worked fine for me for ten years. With wireless keyboard and mouse you can set it up so that you never need to touch the actual laptop. I haven't found the need. The laptop below talks to a waterproof tablet (bluetooth). I upload routes to simple GPS72's in the cockpit that can be configured to display almost any parameter you want. It's true that I don't have the combined capabilities to exploit the wind instrument in combination with the plotter or drive the autohelm (though it can be done).

Laptops can be a bit fragile, and there was a day when I carried two (or even three at one point). Nowadays I don't bother, because there are usually at least two tablets and three phones aboard with fairly comprehensive nav displays.

I seem to effectively have more capability in use than many of my plotter owning friends. This is because I can quietly plan routes on the tablet over my morning tea in my bunk and tinker about in a relaxed way. I then just have to bluetooth them to the real nav system when I get up.
 
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