cagey
Well-Known Member
As header, curious what year did UK buoyage swap over.
Thanks
K
Thanks
K
As header, curious what year did UK buoyage swap over.
Thanks
K
As an extra was it topmarks and colours or just colours.
IIRC it was just black changing to green (which had previously been the colour for wreck buoys).
Red has always been port hand (going in the direction of buoyage)..
It's a pity that in America, it's the other way round.
I think there was a conference at which the Americans and Europeans could not agree on a common system, hence "A" and "B".
Possibly the only cardinal mark in North American waters is a N cardinal at the north end of Fighting Island in the Detroit River where the two channels either side of the island meet (42°14'.9N, 83°07'.0W). It is on the international border between USA and Canada, so not sure which side it belongs to.Indeed there was. The American attitude was the 'we've got more marks than anyone else, so why should we change?'
The also didn't adopt the IALA A system, as a consequence their buoyage is quite a mess, especially where two waterways meet - which was always a problem with the old lateral system.
As an American yachtsman said to me when I was sailing there..'I don't know how you guys get on. We can't understand it and we live here!'
Thanks for that little trip down memory lane. Black buoys were always easier to see than green, and the colour change was not necessarily for the better.This diagram dates from around 1974. IIRC the change to the IALA system was phased in over a 2 or 3 year period around 1977/78/79. I think the south coast may have been the last area to change. I can remember it changing in the Solent so it must have been about 1979.
The direction changed in part of the Solent as well so the port and starboard buoys swapped sides
This diagram dates from around 1974. IIRC the change to the IALA system was phased in over a 2 or 3 year period around 1977/78/79. I think the south coast may have been the last area to change. I can remember it changing in the Solent so it must have been about 1979.
The direction changed in part of the Solent as well so the port and starboard buoys swapped sides
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The old system had its advantages, especially for the colour blind. I have normal colour vision, but occasionally find it hard to distinguish red and green buoys against the sun.
Brilliant. He (I presume) deserves a knighthood.And this sytem that appeared near my mooring a couple of years or so back did not help in that respect
What is it port or starboard?]