Sailor of Fortune
Guru
choose the Iron Mike..
Having experienced last week total electrical failure (no GPS, radar, autopilot, etcetera) while boating in fog, but blessed with a non-electronic engine requiring only fuel and air and sufficient visibility between channel markers, successfully navigating to a boatyard, I vote for radar over autopilot if there is the possibility of limited visibility. ... When systems work, we use autopilot 90 percent of the time to steer. ... Previous to this experience, I'd choose otto over radar.
knee jerk reaction Mark. If you had a "total loss or electrical, the radar wouldn't get you out of the situation as well.
Just curious how your AIS can identify which commercial traffic is snooty.If i had to choose between radar and ais, i would select ais. In thousands of hours i have seldom used radar. I steer almost exclusively with auto pilot. Ais tells me snooty commercial traffic and 60 percent, or so, of civilian traffic.
Just curious how your AIS can identify which commercial traffic is snooty.
Those ate the ones that don't answer when h applied
Travel to the Great Lakes and you will find almost exclusively professional courteous commercial traffic. Lots of the same professionals along the Eastern seaboard also.
Regarding the adoption of AIS by recreational boaters in the USA, less than 5% have it. Now if you want to specify a minimum size boat, say over 30', the number is still under 25% that transmit AIS information.
Ted
When navigating channels at trawler speeds (6-8 kts) with long distances between markers such as ICW, California Delta, Lake Okeechobee, or meandering River entrances, I find an A/P interfaces to chart plotter invaluable as it will keep the boat in the channel. With any current or wind setting the boat, hand steering can easily and quickly end up outside of the channel without notice unless you constantly look aft to make sure you are directly between the channel markets. All depends on where you are boating, but in places like coastal Florida (ICW), if safety is the yardstick, A/P is arguably more important than radarIt seems to me that an autopilot is not very useful. Where I boat you need to pay attention to what's ahead to avoid debris in the water. So I'm sitting at the helm anyway. At cruising speed my boat tracks straight so having to make constant adjustments is not required (except when avoiding an obstacle). I just point the boat where I want and make periodic adjustments as necessary. In snotty conditions I'm actively driving the boat anyway.
Only utility may be if you are single handing and need to use the head. Of course, you might end up getting hit by a ferry.
I just heave to when nature calls.
Long distance blue water crossings may be a different issue, but I've not experienced those.
FWIW, I have a radar system but I've never got around to installing it. Never been in a situation where I wished I had it available either.
Willard 30s, little sister to my W36, also have cable steering. A current owner on out owners group recently said he was looking at an Octopus drive which apparently supports cable steering. Alternative to installing hydraulic. Wish I knew more.I have the Atlas Acadia 25 also. My Acadia 25 is cable steering, not hydraulic. Mine came with the Raymarine autopilot that turns the wheel, Raymarine SPX-5R autopilot.
The drive unit that turns the wheel is not working correctly and from what I have read is pretty much not supported anymore because it is so unreliable. (I have been told I might be able to use the Autopilot Controller and rate-gyro processor with a hydraulic unit). If your Acadia 25 is also cable steering you would most likely have to change to hydraulic steering before finding a reliable autopilot.
From my research getting the hydraulic steering/autopilot will cost double or more getting radar.
I use autopilot every time I use the boat.
I use radar less than 10% of the time. And of those times, less than half I really need it.
I do not need it to see buoys. I know where I am by looking at my chart plotter. It's an old one but it's dead on.
I say get autopilot. It runs the boat so you can pay attention to other things like keeping a good lookout.
Understood. There are some instances where A/P cannot/shound not be used. Crossing a bar often times has conditions like you suggest. But in many boating areas such as the ICW, the channel is narrow and sometimes wind/current set can be deceptive and push you our of a channel. If you use GoTo a GPS waypoint vs steer a heading, A/P will steer for XTE. Result is a much safer and consistent course than hand steering. Though I admit, that doesn't mean set-and-forget. I have found ATONs to be accurate unless a recent storm.If I were to depend upon my plotter to know where the day marks and buoys are around here, my boat would be adorned with parts of and marks from every one in the bay system.
Radar overlaid on a GPS picture is the gold standard IMHO. You can avoid wing dams with that setup too. AP will not help that much in a river with lots of currents and swirls unless you have it following a plotted ROUTE from the plotter. Otherwise, your AP is going to follow a course and run you into trouble because you were depending on it to do something you should have been doing by hand. I found that AP on the Mississippi was useless in a lot of the area where wing dams proliferated because it simply could not react fast enough to the swirling conditions we encountered, even when on a plotted route vice trying to steer a course. I was running a GB36 up the Big Muddy with a substantial rudder and often had to use the wheel stop to stop to keep from being turned 90 degrees in seconds - NO AP can cope with that.
I have both AIS & a damn good radar. What's the difference? Everyone out there doesn't have AIS but even those that don't can be seen on radar.What about getting an AP and installing AIS to use kind of like radar? I use my AIS more than radar. AIS is much cheaper than radar.
I have both AIS & a damn good radar. What's the difference? Everyone out there doesn't have AIS but even those that don't can be seen on radar.
I have both AIS & a damn good radar. What's the difference? Everyone out there doesn't have AIS but even those that don't can be seen on radar.
The biggest thing that can help hand steering skill is the following rule of thumb: "if you don't actively need to change where the boat is pointing, get your damn hands off the wheel!" That sentence alone has taken more than a few people's steering abilities (in good weather) from making squiggles in the water (constantly chasing perfection) to just making minor course corrections here and there based on compass / chartplotter feedback.
Jack London - Cruise of the SnarkAnd yet there are men who have sailed the seas for forty years and who hold that no boat can run before it without being steered. They'll call me a liar when they read this.
It seems to me that an autopilot is not very useful. Where I boat you need to pay attention to what's ahead to avoid debris in the water. So I'm sitting at the helm anyway. At cruising speed my boat tracks straight so having to make constant adjustments is not required (except when avoiding an obstacle). I just point the boat where I want and make periodic adjustments as necessary. In snotty conditions I'm actively driving the boat anyway.
Only utility may be if you are single handing and need to use the head. Of course, you might end up getting hit by a ferry.
I just heave to when nature calls.
Long distance blue water crossings may be a different issue, but I've not experienced those.
FWIW, I have a radar system but I've never got around to installing it. Never been in a situation where I wished I had it available either.
Auto pilot doesn't mean you don't have to pay attention. I am always at the helm, auto pilot or not. No sailor worth his salt would leave the bridge unmanned