Barbarella
New Member
Hi there, I plan to sail around the UK and Ireland this summer. Where can I buy (on-line) secondhand Admiralty or Imray paper charts? Under 5 years old. I would update them using Notices to Mariners. Thanks. Cheers,
It's all to do with"What if".I can't understand why, now that we are well into the 21st century, that people opt to use 19th century technology. Especially when considering using 2nd hand charts and all the faff involved in updating them!
A tablet or even a phone with GPS, a nav app and VMH or the like charts plus a built in USB charge socket and you are ready to go.
Is it because people are technophobes, or do they think that GPS will suddenly fail? If it did, the ramifications would be far more than a yachty having to rely on DR!
From previous threads, I know that there are many who would disagree ☺
I would concur about utility of second hand charts. No new rocks and islands appear and any bridges and barrages are fairly visible. A few nav marks change but mostly in BC its change from lateral to cardinal or vice versa....
In the Bristol Channel depths change on an 19 year cycle. No chart is fully up to date for more than 2 seasons. Thats what depth guages/lumps of lead are for. The general locus of the banks however does not change.Having almost completed my 2020 updates, I assure you that the majority have been new rocks and contour changes, or rather surveyed for the first time. Physical features such as fish farms are the second biggest change. Massive mooring buoys for cruise ships have been popular additions and a significant number of special marks have been added or deleted.
I agree something like Memory Maps with the UK chart package, or the Navionics App is a solid solution for the OP.
Why all the rocks appearing and changes to contours? The majority are inshore in shallower waters where yachts may sail and I suspect folks are simply keen to inform the U.K. Hydrographic Office after their new kit has accurately surveyed the sea bed!
Hi there, I plan to sail around the UK and Ireland this summer. Where can I buy (on-line) secondhand Admiralty or Imray paper charts? Under 5 years old. I would update them using Notices to Mariners. Thanks. Cheers,
p.s. I omitted to mention pilot guides. I have old ones for southern Britain and SW Ireland, but would like to buy or borrow ones for Scotland and the rest of Ireland for such a trip, though I don't consider them essential and the lack of any of them would not deter me from embarking on such a trip.
What are those flappy cloth things above the boat in your avatar image?I can't understand why, now that we are well into the 21st century, that people opt to use 19th century technology.
Well, it's not a square rigger ?What are those flappy cloth things above the boat in your avatar image?
Back in the day I used to use a small scale passage chart :I do like to have at least small scale paper charts available, in case the plotter fails for some reason. That would at least enable me to get back to port.

It is actually because sometimes 19th century technology is better for purpose than 21st C stuff and certainly more reliable. I always have been and continue to be a fan of paper charts and personally think it poor preparation if you don't have paper charts aboard . I personally find them much better than plotters or tablets for most aspects of passage planning or even just looking at where I might venture. I know that others will differ and that is their choice. And yes GPS can suddenly fail - maybe not the system but the instrument can. I have known a number of yachts to have suffered lightning strikes resulting in total loss of electronics. I my case though not a lightning strike my GPS screen burnt out and was unreadable when I was crossing the Pacific singlehanded. I was certainly glad I had paper charts with me. Of course I did have a back up in a handheld GPS but I needed a chart to plot my position on.I can't understand why, now that we are well into the 21st century, that people opt to use 19th century technology. Especially when considering using 2nd hand charts and all the faff involved in updating them!
......., or do they think that GPS will suddenly fail?
From previous threads, I know that there are many who would disagree ☺
Only one backup GPS, a minimum if you're not versed in astro nav on an ocean passage. These days with GPS on phone, tablet et al and one of them stored in a tin box you would be hard pressed not to know your position. As for charts, as I've shown above, it's fairly easy to knock up a passage chart on a sheet of A4 graph paper, not forgetting that a phone or tablet can be a dormant chart plotter.my GPS screen burnt out and was unreadable when I was crossing the Pacific singlehanded. I was certainly glad I had paper charts with me. Of course I did have a back up in a handheld GPS but I needed a chart to plot my position on.
I demur. It's always possible to confect a scenario where a variety of electrical systems fail but most are improbable in the extreme given multiple backup systems which can be had for less money and offer greater versatility. Like Trump, paper charts have had their day but many adherents don't yet recognise that fact.I would however not be without some paper covering large areas. Iphones get dropped in sea (done that), powerpacks and ipads fail. The very electrics of a boat may fail (had that too), and one still wants to find safe haven. Low tech paper and compass will get one home.
Always remember that a serious solar flare could knock out the entire constellation of satellites; the satellites wouldn't survive a flare like the Carrington Event (caused serious problems for telegraph systems in the 19th century!). If that happened you could have as many GPS units as you like - they'll all be bricks without the satellites sending signals!Only one backup GPS, a minimum if you're not versed in astro nav on an ocean passage. These days with GPS on phone, tablet et al and one of them stored in a tin box you would be hard pressed not to know your position. As for charts, as I've shown above, it's fairly easy to knock up a passage chart on a sheet of A4 graph paper, not forgetting that a phone or tablet can be a dormant chart plotter.