GPS on my laptop
Gee, doesn't anyone sail by hand, eye, and feel anymore? I always thought
getting there was much of the fun. Seems like all this automatic 'set it and
let it do the sailing' removes a lot from the experience.
--
Njord
"Lord, your sea is so big, and my boat is so small"
Anonymous
"Jeff Morris" wrote in message
...
I would advise against using a computer as the primary GPS. And a
"plug-in" GPS (one
that can't work alone) is even worse. At the very least, get a small
handheld that can
stand alone, and connect it to the computer with a data cable.
Although I have a number of computer charting programs loaded, and my boat
is wired
appropriately, I hardly ever use the computer underway. A small mapping
handheld (I have
an older GPSMAP 175, today I'd get a 76 or 176) plus a chartkit suits my
need much better.
I have friends that like using the computer, and have it wired to the
autopilot, so the
boat will "follow the mouse," but they have an enclosed center cockpit 41
foot ketch, and
the computer is right down the companionway. Plus they have another GPS
at the helm.
The last time I researched low end GPS units, I decided the Garmin GPS 72
was the "best
buy" because it came with the cables that would be needed. I don't think
this is still
true - whatever you get, consider the "total cost" of all the accessories
you'll want.
The 72 is nice because it has a large display, its waterproof and floats,
and has a navaid
and tide database.
"Dennis Vogel" wrote in message
hlink.net...
I have a nice laptop running Windows XP with a nice big screen.
Can anyone recommend a GPS plug-in for my laptop that comes with sailors
software? It should have all the good stuff like VMG.
I've been away from sailing for several years. If this is not a good
choice
then can someone recommend a reasonable cost handheld or deck-mounted
GPS
system?
Thanks,
Dennis
Pearson Flyer #168
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