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Date:         Sun, 28 Sep 2008 14:44:25 -0400
Reply-To:     David Beierl <dbeierl@ATTGLOBAL.NET>
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From:         David Beierl <dbeierl@ATTGLOBAL.NET>
Subject:      Re: GPS recommendations, handheld & incar?
Comments: To: Jake de Villiers <crescentbeachguitar@GMAIL.COM>
In-Reply-To:  <71d9cdf90809281020h687c4846pb33a46b3f88a79d8@mail.gmail.co m>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"; format=flowed

At 01:20 PM 9/28/2008, Jake de Villiers wrote: >Thanks for that Rico, I thought I was the only one who thought that GPS was >kinda like sucking your thumb. :-)

GPS -- when it works -- makes marine navigation terrifyingly easy. Part of prudence is knowing what you are going to do when the machine goes wrong. My ordinary procedure cruising in Maine (wicked foggy and wicked rocky, noticeable currents) in the GPS era was GPS backed by LORAN C backed by radar backed by situational awareness and readiness to shift to dead reckoning and/or bug out into safer waters.

I've done more than one two-week cruise on that island-strewn coast where we hardly saw land except for the last hundred feet coming up to a pier. Doing it without electronic aids takes the unremitting effort of two people, with a third keeping an eye on the depth sounder (oops -- electronic), and it's downright scary. Doing it with LORAN C or non-SA GPS positions takes a lot of the strain off, although two weeks of it would usually wake up my ulcer. Doing it with your position continuously plotted on a detailed chart using WAAS-augmented GPS is, as I said, terrifyingly easy. It's difficult to keep a proper level of caution.

David ps -- I've also taken that same boat, with a bunch of Vanagon people on board, and run it straight on to a rock in broad daylight *that I was trying to show them and that they were actively looking for* -- turns out the visibility through that plankton-bowl was about six inches, not the several feet I was expecting. Boy, did I feel stoopid, especially when the boat started to sink. Turns out that many years before my father had made friends with a rock near Boothbay Harbor, and the pirates he took it to to repair it had filled a two-inch depth of Fiberglas with *BONDO* and pasted a single layer of glass cloth over it. When I tapped it in the same place, the Bondo fell out.

-- David Beierl - Providence RI USA -- http://pws.prserv.net/synergy/Vanagon/ '84 Westy "Dutiful Passage," '85 GL "Poor Relation"


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