jimbaerselman
Well-Known Member
And even with four plotters, plus power, you're vulnerable to GPS signal interference or degradation
Even with four plotters, you are still vulnerable to power failure.
My original point wasn't inteded as so much that GPS is unreliable as I was surprised that my single bearing based manual position had turned out to be substantially more accurate.... Makes me think I won't rely on GPS alone for pilotage. Not because the GPS might fail, but because the accuracy isn't guaranteed, and a simple double check is after all really easy!
I'm working away from home at the moment so stuck in a hotel in Swansea. I just got a position fix out of the hotel window using a hand bearing compass to a nav buoy 2 miles out and adding in roughly how far I am from the harbour wall (not very) - overlaid onto google maps the resulting fix was more accurate than the GPS position on my tablet.
Admittedly the GPS would have been better if I wasn't in a hotel building with a lot of floors above me - but I still found it educational
What surprised me was Navionics seemed to have no way of providing compass variation data. Found it in another app (a dedicated compass) - but it seems an odd thing to be missing. Also if I'd wanted to draw more than one bearing line for a cocked hat I'd have been out of luck.
Paper charts still have some uses then.
My original point wasn't inteded as so much that GPS is unreliable as I was surprised that my single bearing based manual position had turned out to be substantially more accurate.... Makes me think I won't rely on GPS alone for pilotage. Not because the GPS might fail, but because the accuracy isn't guaranteed, and a simple double check is after all really easy!
Impressed with your reversion to manual means of navigation but don't rely on the accuracy of your hotel room fix too much! It's a bit different when you are in a pitching boat and cra**ing yourself! All for keeping a plot on paper for back up, electrical failure, the yanks switching off the satellites, whatever. Believe me, having lived through charts, RDF, Decca, la di da dida, there ain't nothing like GPS!
with 4 completely independent chart plotters on board, its a chance I can take. I log the lat long at intervals when offshore as a belt and braces, but don't bother with the chart.
We have two fixed GPS - a Garmin and an MLR each with its own antenna. Their position read outs always agree within 2-4 metres when I've checked - we mainly use the MLR as it's connected to the Tacktick system.I agree with everything you said. GPS is amazing. GPS double-checked with something else is even better!
Since both receivers sit on the same boat, they would be subject to the same interference..We have two fixed GPS - a Garmin and an MLR each with its own antenna. Their position read outs always agree within 2-4 metres when I've checked - we mainly use the MLR as it's connected to the Tacktick system.
Sorry, went a bit overboard there. What I really feel is that one of the joys of sailing is the fulfilment to be experienced by using all the skills and black arts acquired. I enjoy using paper charts andtaking fixes by the various means possible, when piloting in sight of land, and doing EPs when navigating on longer, offshore passages. The chartplotter is useful for confirmation/comparison, but relying solely on it would diminish the experience for me.If the only reason for keeping a logbook is to ward off dementia, I think I'll happily leave it for another thirty years
Pete
But what provides the position input? GPS? if so are they realy independent?
I bought my Trimble Ensign early in 1992, in Singapore, for not much under $1000Although my GPS occasionally will lose its fix for a short time, usually a few seconds only, it has seldom let me down since I started using one sixteen years ago. There may be exceptions, but it looks to me as if the position is either correct, within the system's errors, or sufficiently wrong for the error to be obvious. The exception to this might be when GPS jamming is occurring, one reason why I will be leaving my charts in view when sailing.
I must admit I have never seen the GPS go ape whilst I've been sailing.
Am I imagining it, or has there's been a thread or two here in the past on NATO exercises, announced in advance, where GPS was going to be affected?
I bought my Trimble Ensign early in 1992, in Singapore, for not much under $1000. Used in SE Asia, Adriatic and Ionian, I never experienced any hiccups, ever. It had relatively limited functionality (3-channel, satellite and coordinates display only). But then none of the areas I have used it in were influenced by military jamming, fairly common in northern Europe, which can wipe out the minute signals so very easily. But I still am aware that even with plotter, HH GPS receiver, AIS with integrated GPS - all independent from each other - a loss of signal in my locale will have me resorting to DR with my paper charts. But at least I will have a recorded position report no older than one hour.
Quite so. And is it really so much of a hardship to record your position every so often? I enjoy doing it - there's often not much else to do.