john_morris_uk
Well-Known Member
I really cannot understand anyone contemplating boring a hole in the hull to fit a log paddle-wheel sensor. When I had one it always fouled in a short time and needed constant removal and cleaning - water got in even with sealing flaps. The whole procedure was a pain and is so primitive that I would sooner go back to my Walker Excelsior Mk IV trailing log than re-install it, except that is somewhere in the cellar and not even on the boat, just like my sextant and tables.
The original skin fitting is now blanked off and my Garmin plotter provides a very precise SOG in one of the data windows - far more accurate (to two decimal places) than the original VDO log ever was and it gives trip and total distances too. True that there is no through-the-water speed but I do not need that, SOG is the important thing and just as useful for sail trimming.
I have two other GPS back-ups, including a netbook running OpenCPN with the dashboard readout. I have never known anything ever interfering with full GPS reception and think it infinitely unlikely - too much of the world's navigation/surveying services rely on it.
Although I understand your logic, I think you express your opinion a little too strongly. Speed through the water is important - it helps you know what is happening to the tidal stream if nothing else. Just as you can't imagine drilling a hole in the bottom of the boat, so I can't imagine sailing without a log. I would want to know whether my SOG was slow due to debris round the keel/prop/rudder or whether the tide had turned earlier than predicted or what? Perhaps its a mental state of mind from growing up navigating without GPS or Decca.
The fouling thing really isn't too much bother. I don't even anti-foul our impeller but remove it and clean it when I go sailing. You just clean the thing (flap or no flap) and sponge out the bilge.
To put my relationship with the log in context, I also carry a Walker Log on board in case the electronic one fails...