lw395
Well-Known Member
I've sailed for over 55 years: a bit of racing, a fair bit of cruising, and loads of reading.
I think 'true wind' always used to mean the wind I'd feel when sitting on a deck chair on a beach.
Then along came those bright young things, inventing all those magical, electronic, wind measuring devices, and ..... they decided to invent their own definitions, riding roughshod over centuries of common usage.
That is what the American Meteorological would say:
The true wind is defined herein as a vector wind with a speed referenced to the fixed earth and a direction referenced to true north.
That's a useful definition if you want to plot a weather chart.
Less handy for racing a boat.
Best to just accept that there are different definitions and check which one is being used, if and when it matters.