prv
Well-Known Member
Good point Pete, still needed a wider berth![]()
Well, obviously they needed to miss it, not hit it. But the problem apparently was not that they plotted a route that was safe on the chart but dangerous in reality, due to mismatch between the two. There was no significant mismatch.
Either they a) plotted a safe route but then didn't follow it, or they b) plotted a route which was dangerous both on the chart and in reality (or, I guess, they c) didn't plot any route at all and just pointed the bow in roughly the right direction, but that seems unlikely for such a boat). Post 16 suggests that it was option b) - the planned route was dangerous on the chart, but because detail disappears from vector charts when you zoom out, the danger wasn't immediately visible when viewing the whole route.
This is one reason I like to use a paper chart as well as a plotter - the human cartographer can make more intelligent decisions about what to include on a given chart (like, for instance, a mid-ocean reef on a likely passage route) whereas a plotter just has a fairly crude algorithm based on zoom level.
Pete