Greetings!
A bit of background: my wife and I have decided to buy a (used) long-range, ocean-going motor boat and spend perhaps 6 months per year exploring North America's West Coast, from Washington up to Alaska. After a season or two we'll want to venture much farther, perhaps down to Mexico, up the Sea of Cortez, across to the Galapagos, through the Panama Canal and into the Caribbean, and from there over to Europe.
To that end we've engaged the services of a "buyers' broker" to help us find a suitable boat and coach us through the acquisition/familiarization/equipping/updating processes.
In the meantime we've been researching the ins & outs of various systems, including navigation systems, both hardware and software.
What a dog's breakfast.
At least that's how it looks to me, with mutually incompatible proprietary chart formats, software that will only communicate with certain brands of hardware through certain proprietary interfaces, etc. etc. And it gets worse: electronic charts that can only be used on one machine at a time (e.g by plugging in a USB thumb drive), can't be backed up, and require a login and a key code every time you use them.
I'm hoping this is a mistaken impression, and that the situation isn't really as bad as it looks. Or if it is, that there are workarounds.
Here's a preliminary list of what I consider essential:
1) A large combination touchscreen/pushbutton chartplotter at the main helm, and if the boat has a flying bridge, a second chartplotter up above. The second unit could be smaller, and lack pushbuttons since it won't be the primary navigation/piloting tool.
2) At least one laptop computer to serve as a backup, and enable the navigator to plan and plot courses anywhere on the boat, and on shore. Probably a MacBook, since I abominate Windows 10 and wouldn't have it on board (bet our lives on a computer that might insist on an update at any time? Not likely).
3) Possibly a third chartplotter to use in the tender. This could be an Android device or, more likely, an iPad for simplicity's sake. Might even be an iPhone, I don't know.
4) Electronic charts—both vector and raster—that can be used anywhere, any time, on a variety of devices; and backed up in case the primary onboard system croaks.
Of course we'll also want paper charts, pilot charts, cruising guides, and all the rest of it. Heck, I might even spring for a sextant and learn the rudiments of celestial navigation.
So I'm trying to thread my way through the maze, looking for suggestions and possible solutions from more experienced cruisers. This means pretty much anyone who owns a boat and has travelled more than, say, 50 miles on it.
Thanks in advance,
Blind Owl, future ocean voyager.
A bit of background: my wife and I have decided to buy a (used) long-range, ocean-going motor boat and spend perhaps 6 months per year exploring North America's West Coast, from Washington up to Alaska. After a season or two we'll want to venture much farther, perhaps down to Mexico, up the Sea of Cortez, across to the Galapagos, through the Panama Canal and into the Caribbean, and from there over to Europe.
To that end we've engaged the services of a "buyers' broker" to help us find a suitable boat and coach us through the acquisition/familiarization/equipping/updating processes.
In the meantime we've been researching the ins & outs of various systems, including navigation systems, both hardware and software.
What a dog's breakfast.
At least that's how it looks to me, with mutually incompatible proprietary chart formats, software that will only communicate with certain brands of hardware through certain proprietary interfaces, etc. etc. And it gets worse: electronic charts that can only be used on one machine at a time (e.g by plugging in a USB thumb drive), can't be backed up, and require a login and a key code every time you use them.
I'm hoping this is a mistaken impression, and that the situation isn't really as bad as it looks. Or if it is, that there are workarounds.
Here's a preliminary list of what I consider essential:
1) A large combination touchscreen/pushbutton chartplotter at the main helm, and if the boat has a flying bridge, a second chartplotter up above. The second unit could be smaller, and lack pushbuttons since it won't be the primary navigation/piloting tool.
2) At least one laptop computer to serve as a backup, and enable the navigator to plan and plot courses anywhere on the boat, and on shore. Probably a MacBook, since I abominate Windows 10 and wouldn't have it on board (bet our lives on a computer that might insist on an update at any time? Not likely).
3) Possibly a third chartplotter to use in the tender. This could be an Android device or, more likely, an iPad for simplicity's sake. Might even be an iPhone, I don't know.
4) Electronic charts—both vector and raster—that can be used anywhere, any time, on a variety of devices; and backed up in case the primary onboard system croaks.
Of course we'll also want paper charts, pilot charts, cruising guides, and all the rest of it. Heck, I might even spring for a sextant and learn the rudiments of celestial navigation.
So I'm trying to thread my way through the maze, looking for suggestions and possible solutions from more experienced cruisers. This means pretty much anyone who owns a boat and has travelled more than, say, 50 miles on it.
Thanks in advance,
Blind Owl, future ocean voyager.
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