dom
Well-Known Member
I think you’ve got this the wrong way round, some sailors around the world have adopted the OEMs over-simplified version of True Wind, and now think the inaccuracy is actually the new definition. Plenty of sailors do think that, but it doesn’t make it right and it certainly isn’t helpful to all the other sailors who actually understand what their instruments can, and can’t do.
Adopting the OEMs language has advantages in that I can perhaps talk to an NKE engineer despite my dodgy French. If we differed on what we meant by TWS I might as well go home! But it's nevertheless a fair point to argue that their preferred definition has to an extent influenced sailing wind terminology.
The central point is that there is no 'right' and nobody need make any mistakes whatsoever if they consistently apply any inertial frame of reference of their choosing. One could choose a lunar one and still get it right subject to the maths.
It is the inconsistent use of reference frames can causes problems and these can, sadly, be serious.
BTW: anyone know if the RYA has a standard on this for YM, etc?
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