Piers wrote:
One point I'd missed completely which they both pointed out. The International (Anti) Coll regs call for radar to be on and working the moment a vessel is under way. Not an option.
This is not the case in the US.* A lot of people think it is, but the USCG folks I've asked about it say it's not.* The wording of the rule in the COLREGs is---
(a) Every vessel shall use all available means appropriate to the prevailing circumstances and conditions to determine if risk of collision exists. If there is any doubt such risk shall be deemed to exist.
(b) Proper use shall be made of radar equipment if fitted and operational, including long-range scanning to obtain early warning of risk of collision and radar plotting or equivalent systematic observation of detected objects.
Some people interpret*paragraph (a)*as meaning that if you have radar it must be on when the vessel is underway, but in fact that is not what the rule means(according to the USCG folks I've talked to and it's their rule).*
The thing that trips everyone up is the phrase "appropriate to the prevailing circumstances and conditions."* According to the Coast Guard folks, "appropriate" is something you, the operator, decides upon.* Some things, like fog, darkness, rain, heavy traffic areas, etc. are obvious.* But if you are boating in clear weather without a vessel in sight,*you don't need to use the radar if you determine it is not appropriate to the conditions.
In paragraph (b) "proper use" does not mean use*the radar*all the time, it means use it properly when you use it.
Now, if you are happily cruising along in clear weather without a vessel in sight and you have the radar off and manage to do something stupid and collide with another vessel or cause another vessel to collide with you, and you have radar and you weren't using it, you can be found to be partially or completely at fault.* But to have radar and chose to not use it is not automatically*violating the COLREGs.* I was told that the rules were written deliberately this way to allow for extenuating circumstances.