Sea Devil
Well-Known Member
I want to receive and send emails from Atlantic/Caribbean as inexpensively as possible . I don't want to go down the SSB route again.
Grateful for any advice...
Grateful for any advice...
I want to receive and send emails from Atlantic/Caribbean as inexpensively as possible . I don't want to go down the SSB route again.
Grateful for any advice...
I had a Garmin inreach issue. We finally managed to fix the problem with advise from Garmin. They offered me a new unit in the event that we couldn't fix ours. They would charge us $150 US. Pretty reasonable for what was a four year old unit at the time. They were very helpful as has all my experience with Garmin over the years. The Inreach has been brilliant over the last few years for long distance sailingI'd get a YB3 tracker (formerly Yellowbrick): YB Tracking | Truly global satellite tracking beacons for yacht racing, adventures, treks, expeditions and challenges | Products - YB3
Repaired one for another cruiser this winter and liked what I saw inside. They're well designed and built and the company tech support was commendable, going the extra mile to help me fix up his very early model and upgrade the firmware to fix a battery management bug. Most other companies would likely just tell you to bin it and buy the latest model.
The OP expressedly wants to exchange emails: none of the Spot, YB, InReach etc devices are suitable, they can do SMS if one wants but not emails with data attachments and the like.
Purely for general internet data (email, gribs and the like), possibly the best IridiumGo, though not so good for voice communication. Unlimited tariff plans particularly interesting.
Check today SSB email capabilities though, you may be surprised
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For the difference in cost, in my opinion the iridium Go is not worth the money. The Garmin Inreach is half the money. On the unlimited tariff, £65/month, you have as much Messaging to mobile phones or email addresses as you want. You only have 160 characters but you can send as many messages as you want. Once you get to 160 characters you just send then carry on with your email on the next message. You do all this through an ipad or other tablet. You get free local weather info and can pay a $ for a detail marine forecast.
We have three friends with Iridium Gos who have had reliability problems. They got them fixed eventually but there does seem to be a reliability issue. The Salty Dog rally three years ago suggested that anybody using an Iridium Go should have a Inreach as back up because of the Gos unreliability.
I think the Go is better in theory than in practise. No internet and adding attachments to email is not great
Thank you - they were interestingThere's a few videos on the subject (I'm not impressed the way some are presented
I'm enjoying this one because it give the evolution of navigational aids and that is exactly what I need at this stage.
But then I want to concentrate on specific modern day aids.
MARINE ELECTRONICS: Communications at Sea, Navigation, and Sailing Apps
Communications & Internet While Cruising -
How do we communicate at sea
The OP expressedly wants to exchange emails: none of the Spot, YB, InReach etc devices are suitable, they can do SMS if one wants but not emails with data attachments and the like.
?The YB3 can do email if paired with a phone (similar to the Iridium Go). Its advantage is that it's still useful as standalone device though, which the Iridium Go is not. The Iridium Go's advantage is that it can you get real IP traffic, although hyper-expensive and too slow to be of much use for anything. You do not want to receive attachments by satellite connection anyways, nor poll your regular email address, as that will quickly ruin you.