MikeP
Legendary Member
- Joined
- Apr 12, 2005
- Messages
- 8,674
- Status
- OTHER
- Hatteras Model
- Not Currently A Hatteras Owner
I don't like the concept of integrated units at all, unless one can afford multiple entirely separate integrated units - as do passenger airplanes. In my boating career I have lost GPS or Radar on several different occasions but never both. I've told these two stories here before but this is another good opportunity.
1. When we were in the UK in '03, a friend took us on board a beautiful new 87ft sailboat that is used for charter. It has all the very highest-tech and latest integrated electronics including some really hi-zoot computer integration for engine and generator monitoring etc.
I was talking to the captain (fairly young guy - mid 30's) about the electronics. When I commented on how impressive the high tech stuff was, he snorted and said that even when it worked it was a pain going through all the menus and if the master computer failed, it all failed. He showed me a shelf with a door on it and said, This is what I really use." He opened the door and there was a stand alone Furuno radar display, a stand-alone Garmin GPS and a stand-alone depth finder.
He went on to explain that "This computer junk is here because the owner wants it here - it looks impressive to the people chartering the boat." He explained that there were constant problems and strange failures.
2. A guy in our marina related that he sailed to Boston after having all his old electronics ripped out and replaced with an integrated system - radar/GPS/depth. Approaching the harbor area, the system started rebooting or recycling on it's own and he lost everything. Fortunately, he still had his paper charts and mag compass and binoculars so he managed to get in OK. He said the lack of a depth finder was the scariest thing.
He has since un-integrated by adding a separate depth finder and a smaller stand-alone radar.
In our current setup, I wouldn't mind incorporating depth into our Garmin 3010C for a handy reference but only because there are separate datamarine depthfinders at each helm station. The GPS/radar/depth will remain separate on Brigadoon as long as the Admiral and I are her caretakers.
1. When we were in the UK in '03, a friend took us on board a beautiful new 87ft sailboat that is used for charter. It has all the very highest-tech and latest integrated electronics including some really hi-zoot computer integration for engine and generator monitoring etc.
I was talking to the captain (fairly young guy - mid 30's) about the electronics. When I commented on how impressive the high tech stuff was, he snorted and said that even when it worked it was a pain going through all the menus and if the master computer failed, it all failed. He showed me a shelf with a door on it and said, This is what I really use." He opened the door and there was a stand alone Furuno radar display, a stand-alone Garmin GPS and a stand-alone depth finder.
He went on to explain that "This computer junk is here because the owner wants it here - it looks impressive to the people chartering the boat." He explained that there were constant problems and strange failures.
2. A guy in our marina related that he sailed to Boston after having all his old electronics ripped out and replaced with an integrated system - radar/GPS/depth. Approaching the harbor area, the system started rebooting or recycling on it's own and he lost everything. Fortunately, he still had his paper charts and mag compass and binoculars so he managed to get in OK. He said the lack of a depth finder was the scariest thing.
He has since un-integrated by adding a separate depth finder and a smaller stand-alone radar.
In our current setup, I wouldn't mind incorporating depth into our Garmin 3010C for a handy reference but only because there are separate datamarine depthfinders at each helm station. The GPS/radar/depth will remain separate on Brigadoon as long as the Admiral and I are her caretakers.