lindsay
Well-Known Member
Has anyone tried the above? Its half the price of Tacktick since they ie raytheon, have apparently stopped production of their "entry level" version.....dont you just lurv that patronising expression?
Every bit of Nasa kit I have bought and fitted has lasted just as well as the Raymarine and Garmin stuff at a fraction of the price.
Using my NASA Clipper now for 5 years works well especially down in my wheelhouse but confess to having bits of wool about also.I learned with telltales, briefly tried NASA Clipper wind, very soon back to telltales and a windex and a lot happier, not to mention better informed !
Good enough PCatterall ?![]()
Nasa stuff is the devils spawn.
At least to those that shelled out loads more on gucci brands that aren't British.
Every bit of Nasa kit I have bought and fitted has lasted just as well as the Raymarine and Garmin stuff at a fraction of the price.
Nice to see a British company doing it well, but there are detractors in these waters.
I had a fin keeler with a 1980's Smiths paddlewheel log, and had to remove the transducer ( afloat, heart in mouth I didn't cross thread the blanking cap ) almost every weekend and several times on holiday cruises, to clear weed or wee beasties.
Antifouling the paddle wheel and its housing a couple of times a year is a successful solution.
Oh, no, I didn't think of that, having had boats all my life...
Even if the antifouling stays put and doesn't foul the potentially rubbing interference tip surface just the weight and inertia of the paint would be serious for calibration if it was a serious aid to navigation; which a paddlewheel log isn't.
Doesn't help with fouling either, other useless tips are vaseline etc.