Seven Spades
Well-Known Member
Does AIS differ from the MARPA on Radar. As I understand it both with give a CPA, I know AIS will give the name to enable you to cal them on the radio, but apart from that is there any difference to the accuracy?
I have a fluxgate compass but (RL70) and I have not heard that I need a better one for MARPA, but the MARPA CPA changes massively as the boat swings under sail. Generally if I see that CPA does not go below 1 mile I tend not to worry, but some times it will fluctuate from 0 to 2 miles +. It sounds like AIR will exhibit a similar problem, I guess I need a bigger boat for it to be more stable.
Does AIS differ from the MARPA on Radar. As I understand it both with give a CPA, I know AIS will give the name to enable you to cal them on the radio, but apart from that is there any difference to the accuracy?
It sounds like AIR will exhibit a similar problem
MARPA on my C70 is basically useless, I assume because my boat lacks a rate gyro, so it's turned off.
The Smart Heading Sensor makes a huge difference.
That's good to know. I found an article a while back about substituting the absurdly expensive Raymarine part with a device churned out in the millions for mobile phones and consequently cheap, while supposedly being equally effective. I plan to fit this at some point to improve autopilot performance; it'll be good if it also makes the MARPA useable which hadn't occurred to me.
perhaps the "absurdly expensive" Raymarine part interfaces seamlessly with the radar/plotter, which is my experience.
Yep, I'm sure it does.
The French device is relatively simple to make, though, and interfaces in exactly the same way, for about £500 less.
Note that I'm not trying to suggest there's anything wrong with choosing the packaged part, it's quite understandable for a key piece of the steering and possibly radar systems. I just can't justify the cash myself when I know there's an alternative.
Pete
Yes, there's a cheaper alternative, if you're handy with electronics. But perhaps the "absurdly expensive" Raymarine part interfaces seamlessly with the radar/plotter, which is my experience.
I have a fluxgate compass but (RL70) and I have not heard that I need a better one for MARPA, but the MARPA CPA changes massively as the boat swings under sail. Generally if I see that CPA does not go below 1 mile I tend not to worry, but some times it will fluctuate from 0 to 2 miles +. It sounds like AIR will exhibit a similar problem, I guess I need a bigger boat for it to be more stable.
Does AIS differ from the MARPA on Radar. As I understand it both with give a CPA, I know AIS will give the name to enable you to cal them on the radio, but apart from that is there any difference to the accuracy?
The standard fluxgate compass used by older Raymarine autohelm course computers did not have a high speed rate gyro making MARPA's accuracy very fuzzy except in flat calm conditions.
Even in flat calm conditions, in my case. There are some piles in the river near my berth, with radar reflectors on top. When I had a go with MARPA, tied up alongside, these posts were reported at speeds of several knots at times, and closing dangerously on my position!
Pete