Roberto
Well-Known Member
Don t forget AIS via MarinetrafficDo people actually navigate using Navionics on a phone?
Don t forget AIS via MarinetrafficDo people actually navigate using Navionics on a phone?
Yes.Do people actually navigate using Navionics on a phone?
Again that may depend on the voyage….Do people actually navigate using Navionics on a phone?
Some people do that as their main means of navigation / plotter but certainly compared to a handheld GPS it’s got a lot going for it - provided you have the means to charge it.Do people actually navigate using Navionics on a phone?
An EPIRB is linked to a single boat, but a PLB is not.If anyone was considering taking their OceanSignal PLB1 from their own UK boat onto someone else’s boat, remember that they should have already registered it to their boat.
If they trigger it aboard a different vessel then the boat details any SAR would be using would be wrong.
I have one of these PLBs and IIRC I linked the registration to my own boat mmsi
The sticker that the uk registry sent for the plb bears my boat name
My PLB1 is linked to me and registered for use on any vessel, hiking etc. I've taken it to remote parts of the world, eg the Atacama Desert, just in case.If anyone was considering taking their OceanSignal PLB1 from their own UK boat onto someone else’s boat, remember that they should have already registered it to their boat.
If they trigger it aboard a different vessel then the boat details any SAR would be using would be wrong.
I have one of these PLBs and IIRC I linked the registration to my own boat mmsi
The sticker that the uk registry sent for the plb bears my boat name
Of the 3 scenarios you give only one might e a case for someone taking their own navigation equipment on a boat and that is the experienced sailor on a new boat with inexperienced skipper. Taking a watch does not require someone to use their own navigation tools ( electronic or not) that's what the ships equipment is for.Some people do that as their main means of navigation / plotter but certainly compared to a handheld GPS it’s got a lot going for it - provided you have the means to charge it.
I think what nobody else has commented on is it depends what “as crew” means. If it means a passenger who is able to winch the sheets or do a bit of sailing, it is quite different from someone who is expected to take watches and different again from someone who is being invited along because the skipper is relatively inexperienced or on a new boat so wants a trusted “old hat”.
Of the 3 scenarios you give only one might e a case for someone taking their own navigation equipment on a boat and that is the experienced sailor on a new boat with inexperienced skipper. Taking a watch does not require someone to use their own navigation tools ( electronic or not) that's what the ships equipment is for.
Yes I have it on my phone from the days when I had it on an I pad ( 2011) but I wouldn't use it to navigate on someone else boat nor mine for that matter.I would wager that many people here do have navionics on their phone ... you can install on more than one phone / tablet ... so the question of whether taken on another boat is a bit of a non-starter surely ??
I know on my boats - Alex who crews with me and his sone quite often ... BOTH of them fire up their Navionics on their phones and follow the boats track ...
I would think that many would do it just out of curiosity etc ... plus they can scroll ... see ahead etc etc without interfering with the main gear on-board.
Yes I have it on my phone from the days when I had it on an I pad ( 2011) but I wouldn't use it to navigate on someone else boat nor mine for that matter.