Radar Upgrades

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ktdtx

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24" El Pescador
I have been to boat shows and looking at color photos on the internet and the lusting for new radar has begun.

Preliminary discussions with dealers suggests there is no upgrade path for my RayMarine E-120 package installed new in approximately 2007.
Essentially you remove most everything (screens, chart plotter, radar, etc) and upgrade the WHOLE THING to digital. You don't buy "just new radar", you get a whole new "system". What I have is not compatible with just new radar.

Anyone just upgraded to one of the new radars (SimRad, Furuno, Garmin) with maybe one new digital screen or other ways?

Thanks
Ken
 
I was told the same thing when I looked at adding AIS to our old electronics. After seeing the cost to upgrade...I decided i liked the old stuff after all.
 
What type of new radar are you looking for? The docs I've seen indicates the 'classic' E-series is compatible with Raymarine "digital" radars. Is there a particular Raymarine model you are interested in?

Another option suggested to me is to treat the radar as a standalone installation with its own screen. You do lose the ability to overlay the radar on your current chart display--which you may or may not feel is a significant issue.
 
Anyone just upgraded to one of the new radars (SimRad, Furuno, Garmin) with maybe one new digital screen or other ways?

Thanks
Ken

Upgraded my radar 6 months ago to the latest and greatest Garmin. My plotter screens were 5 years old. All the features of the antenna work on the old plotters. All that was required was to update the software and add a direction sensor. All features came though including dual range on one screen, ARPA, and AIS. Clearly they have a different business model. I was willing to spend $6K for a new radar, but not an additional $10K to integrate it.

Ted
 
Doppler is absolutely the way to go, but it might require a bit of a wait for the various options to settle out and prices to settle down. Otherwise, color doesn't provide any information that I can make much use of.
 
<<<What type of new radar are you looking for?>>>

Not yet looking for a specific one and not necessarily RayMarine. The SimRad Pulse radar, Furuno Doppler all look/sound interesting but I'm not ready to trash everything just for an upgraded radar.
 
I have a Ray E90W chart plotter and added a domed 18" digital HD color Ray radar. All integrated easily.
Have you called Ray tech support to confirm that you can't just add a radar to your existing setup?
 
<<<Have you called Ray tech support to confirm that you can't just add a radar to your existing setup?>>>

I have not, just discussions with a few dealers at marinas
 
From my discussions with Raymarine tech department, the determining factor in any E series is: E wide series is compatible, E series legacy is not. That is the E120, E90 and so on are legacy units and are not forward compatible. The E120W are compatible. It is very easy to get confused on adds because many say compatible with E series units. That is true if the are the later wide series version. The W in the part number is the identifier for wide. That is the way it was explained to me by Raymarine.
 
This is the one pet peeve I have about marine electronics, they are intentionally designed to cause obsolescence.
 
This is the one pet peeve I have about marine electronics, they are intentionally designed to cause obsolescence.

Blame the march of technology, and the desire to have the latest and greatest. The companies offer the tech, but the obsolecsence is not their fault.
 
This is the one pet peeve I have about marine electronics, they are intentionally designed to cause obsolescence.

It's probably an on going discussion with any tech company. Marketing has their input and probably has more weight than the designers who can make anything compatible if given the chance.

But in the end it's the consumer who makes the choice. If you want the latest and greatest you pay.

The OP can probably find a radar that works with his current equip if so motivated.

I replaced my late 90's analog plotter which worked but required a new map chip every time I went 100 miles from home. It was slow to update and wouldn't accept routes created on my computer. The analog radar coupled to it worked fine. So when I upgraded to my current digital plotter the radar had to be upgraded as well. I liked the old analog radar, not a thing wrong with it but to get a plotter than had greater coverage and the ability to accept routes created in my computer I had to spend the money.

I think the next great thing in marine electronics is internet connectivity. It will bring already available information into one neat package displayed on a plotter. Weather, bottom display, traffic, marina info, just about anything you want will be available without sensors.
 
When we upgraded our electronics suite, the situation was slightly backwards from OP's: we had a good radar, and the rest of the stuff was sketchy. The result was similar, though; integrating that existing radar into a new suite of stuff... wasn't gonna happen. And a new radar would have been over budget.

The only practical effect is that I can't overlay the old phosphor radar display onto the nifty new color MFD charts. That would have been a "nice to have" -- but I always prefer having the radar return on it's own separate display, anyway... so I'm feeling absolutely no pain.

Maybe another 10 years from now -- when the rest of our network is also old and decrepit, and/or maybe the magnetron on this radar has gone south -- an even more integrated suite might find it's way onboard... But at the moment it's a question of need... and I don't. Yet. :)

Different strokes...

-Chris
 
As Ranger says, the alternative to an MFD (multi function device that displays charts along with proprietary radar and fish finder), is to use dedicated devices that are integrated using industry standard interfaces.

MFDs are a great way to put together an electronics suite quickly. And they tend to take up less console space than dedicated devices, so on smaller boats they are often the only viable option. The down side, as you are discovering, is that they are all-or-nothing, lock you into a single vendor for chart plotter, radar, and fish finder, and typically force you to compromise one some functions to get others. Vendor's love this approach because they can sell you more stuff, and you are more likely to keep buying form them in the future.

Dedicated devices allow you to pick best-of-breed for each device, upgrade each device independent of others, avoid single vendor lock-in, and typically get much higher quality devices with more features. And they can all still be integrated together using industry-standard interfaces. They are also more resilient to failures since breakage of one device doesn't take out others. If your MFD fails, you lose everything. The down side is that they typically take up more console space because there are multiple displays and controls required, and you give up some integration features like radar overlay on charts.

I recently went through this transition from an MFD system to dedicated devices integrated with industry-standard interfaces, and have written a number of blog articles on the process at MVTangelwood.com. Assuming you have the space, I vastly prefer using dedicated devices. In the end the cost is about the same, but you get a MUCH better system and are not locked into anything. But I also just installed electronics in a 28' open boat and used and MFD because there wasn't space for dedicated devices.
 
I've read some of your Blog info about the "refit of your electronics refit" ...a mess I hope to learn from.

When you say this
using industry-standard interfaces
are you referring to NMEA 2000?

Thanks
Ken
 
Last year I added a digital radar to my E120 Classic. I had to add a converter to get from the digital antenna to the display, but it works fine. Talk directly to Raymarine support.
 
I've read some of your Blog info about the "refit of your electronics refit" ...a mess I hope to learn from.

When you say this
are you referring to NMEA 2000?

Thanks
Ken

Yes, NMEA 2000, but more so NMEA 0183. 0183 is an ugly dinosaur, but once set up it works reliably, and there are far fewer opportunities for adverse interactions between devices.

NMEA 2000 is still very much a crap shoot whether what you put together will work or not, and if it doesn't, there isn't much you can do about it. I still find problems in pretty much every device that I put my hands on. It's getting better, but still has a long way to go before I'd build another cruising boat that depends on it. Just as an example, I have a 28' open boat that we keep in Gloucester, and I just installed a very simple system. It's a Furuno TZTouch 2 plus an ICOM M506 VHF. It would be really, really hard to create a simpler system. But it doesn't Fu&*(king work. There is some NMEA 2000 incompatibility between the two devices such that when the TZ shares its internal GPS data on the N2K network, the M506 isn't able to decipher it. I don't know what could be more basic than sending GPS info between two devices.
 
Yes, NMEA 2000, but more so NMEA 0183. 0183 is an ugly dinosaur, but once set up it works reliably, and there are far fewer opportunities for adverse interactions between devices.

NMEA 2000 is still very much a crap shoot whether what you put together will work or not, and if it doesn't, there isn't much you can do about it. I still find problems in pretty much every device that I put my hands on. It's getting better, but still has a long way to go before I'd build another cruising boat that depends on it. Just as an example, I have a 28' open boat that we keep in Gloucester, and I just installed a very simple system. It's a Furuno TZTouch 2 plus an ICOM M506 VHF. It would be really, really hard to create a simpler system. But it doesn't Fu&*(king work. There is some NMEA 2000 incompatibility between the two devices such that when the TZ shares its internal GPS data on the N2K network, the M506 isn't able to decipher it. I don't know what could be more basic than sending GPS info between two devices.

FWIW, I recently had some discussion with my most trusted Simrad (I know, bad word in your world) technician. I even recounted some of your prior adventures as I understood them. He remarked that they had similar problems on vessels 70' and larger due to signal loss, noise, crosstalk etc. He stated categorically that he won't use anything but Maretron N2K cables and connectors end-to-end when building N2K networks. In much the same way that there large differences in the quality and speed of Ethernet, and other network cables, apparently, some of the really well known marine electronics manufacturers have been known to provide rather poor quality N2K cables and connectors.

I don't know if this has any bearing on the issues you have faced, but I thought I would just pass it along.:D
 
FWIW, I recently had some discussion with my most trusted Simrad (I know, bad word in your world) technician. I even recounted some of your prior adventures as I understood them. He remarked that they had similar problems on vessels 70' and larger due to signal loss, noise, crosstalk etc. He stated categorically that he won't use anything but Maretron N2K cables and connectors end-to-end when building N2K networks. In much the same way that there large differences in the quality and speed of Ethernet, and other network cables, apparently, some of the really well known marine electronics manufacturers have been known to provide rather poor quality N2K cables and connectors.

I don't know if this has any bearing on the issues you have faced, but I thought I would just pass it along.:D

Yes, this can quickly become a problem if you use the smaller micro cables for both your backbone and your drop cables. I used the smaller cables on my Grand Banks and it was getting close to the edge out the extremes of the network.

My current boat's N2K backbone is made from the big fat "mid" cable. It's about 1/2" diameter. All aspects of the network are well within electrical specs for N2K, including voltage drops, cable lengths, drop lengths, cumulative drop lengths, etc. All cables, tees, and terminators are Maretron. The network has been reviewed and inspected by multiple people, including Simrad and Maretron and has passed with flying colors every time. It has also been tested with Mareton's test meter, and passed.

A poorly constructed network will typically result in data errors because it is electrically marginal. N2K data is all checksum protected so such errors are detected and the PGN's discarded. Many devices keep track of such errors, including Maretron's analyzer device. Seeing checksum errors or other data errors is a sure sign of an electrically marginal network. FWIW, I have never seen a single data error on my network, ever, at any time.

The problems I've seen are 100% behavior, i.e. the wrong PGNs at the wrong time, erroneous PGNs, and interactions between devices. With an analyzer that can decipher and log PGNs, the problems are mostly very visible and evident in those logs. They are all software bugs, plain and simple.

As an aside, only a few of the Simrad problems I had were N2K issues. Their N2K implementation is as good or better than most.
 
BTW, re Simrad being a bad word in my book, it is and it isn't. I still think they have a really good architecture for their system, but an immature implementation. It's the inevitable trade-off between product quality and time to market. The two are inversely related - there is just no way around it. For their own reasons, Simrad have favored time to market. Having made that exact trade-off dozens of times in my carrier producing tech products, I'm pretty sure I understand why they have behaved as they have, but won't speculate about it publicly.
 
Last year I upgraded to Raymarine c97 MFD, digital color radar (dome) and AIS. I had 1988 Raytheon radar and color fish finder. In many ways I prefer the old 48 open aray radar, but it did take up a lot of room.
 
Last year I upgraded to Raymarine c97 MFD, digital color radar (dome) and AIS. I had 1988 Raytheon radar and color fish finder. In many ways I prefer the old 48 open aray radar, but it did take up a lot of room.
I did the same thing last year, a C97 and digital color radome, but bought a Raymarine VHF radio with an AIS receiver built in. Very easy installation, but what really pleased me was hooking up the 2003 vintage autopilot and finding out it integrated perfectly with the C97. I wasn't expected that.
 
I did the same thing last year, a C97 and digital color radome, but bought a Raymarine VHF radio with an AIS receiver built in. Very easy installation, but what really pleased me was hooking up the 2003 vintage autopilot and finding out it integrated perfectly with the C97. I wasn't expected that.

I found out that in order to overlay radar on my chart plotter, I have to have an electronic compass. I think it is the same one for auto pilot, which I do not have:ermm:
 
I found out that in order to overlay radar on my chart plotter, I have to have an electronic compass. I think it is the same one for auto pilot, which I do not have:ermm:

You're right. My autopilot has a fluxgate compass and that allows the radar overlay. I had a Raymarine C80, 2005 vintage, on my Camano and it allowed radar overlay without the compass. At least until a software update from Raymarine did away with it. Luckily I found out about it and didn't do the update.
 

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