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#11
posted to rec.boats.electronics
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True "true wind" & the Raymarine ST60, or other
"b393capt" wrote in message oups.com... I am just about to buy a bunch of Raymaine instruments for my new B 393, and just found out that the ST60 is limited to using SOW, and won't use GPS SOG & COG, to calculate true wind. After looking thru this forum, I see some references to this issue, but don't see either (1) A way to get true wind on any of the Raymarine instruments, does it work on the Tri data ?? (2) Another vendor who does not have this limitation mentioned. Can anyone help me ? Especially at low sailing speed and strong current, this can make all the difference. The Navman wind instrument can use either SOG or water speed for true wind calculation. You can also "fool" any NMEA wind instrument by converting the NMEA RMC sentence from the GPS (COG) to VHW (speed thru water). A Brookhouse multiplexer will do this for you. You can load a simple script for this conversion. You may need a multiplexer anyway if you are building an integrated instrument system. Wout |
#12
posted to rec.boats.electronics
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True "true wind" & the Raymarine ST60, or other
"Wout B." wrote in message ... "b393capt" wrote in message oups.com... I am just about to buy a bunch of Raymaine instruments for my new B 393, and just found out that the ST60 is limited to using SOW, and won't use GPS SOG & COG, to calculate true wind. After looking thru this forum, I see some references to this issue, but don't see either (1) A way to get true wind on any of the Raymarine instruments, does it work on the Tri data ?? (2) Another vendor who does not have this limitation mentioned. Can anyone help me ? Especially at low sailing speed and strong current, this can make all the difference. The Navman wind instrument can use either SOG or water speed for true wind calculation. You can also "fool" any NMEA wind instrument by converting the NMEA RMC sentence from the GPS (COG) to VHW (speed thru water). A Brookhouse multiplexer will do this for you. You can load a simple script for this conversion. You may need a multiplexer anyway if you are building an integrated instrument system. Wout Sorry, I meant GPS (SOG) in my posting above, not GPS (COG). Using SOG instead of speed thru water is useful if the paddle wheel of the speed instrument gives a very inaccurate reading and/or is fouled. It is of course only accurate if the heading of the vessel is the same as the COG, as the measured wind-angle is relative to the centre line of the vessel. Wout |
#13
posted to rec.boats.electronics
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True "true wind" & the Raymarine ST60, or other
"Timothy.Rulon" wrote in message ... b393capt wrote: I am just about to buy a bunch of Raymaine instruments for my new B 393, and just found out that the ST60 is limited to using SOW, and won't use GPS SOG & COG, to calculate true wind. After looking thru this forum, I see some references to this issue, but don't see either (1) A way to get true wind on any of the Raymarine instruments, does it work on the Tri data ?? (2) Another vendor who does not have this limitation mentioned. Can anyone help me ? To calculate true wind you also need true heading. SOW, SOG and COG alone won't work as set/drift begin to effect your vessel which will occur as you slow down. At zero speed, a GPS is likely to report anything for COG unless it has a built in aid like a magnetic flux gate compass. There are some expensive GPS receivers which provide true heading by using 2 antennas and lower cost LORAN-C sensor units being developed which does something similar. Should also work great as an input to an autopilot rather than magnetic sensors which can get tricked by magnetic anomolies. I'm not aware of a recreation-priced system which performs all the above but would very much like to hear about it for a government application. For marine weather information, please visit http://www.nws.noaa.gov/om/marine/home.htm This is correct of course, but what is often referred to as "true" wind on a sailboat as opposed to apparent, is relative to the centre line of the boat, but corrected for speed. The T on the ST60 instrument actually stands for "theoretical". Many nav software packages calculate the true wind direction and speed from heading, relative wind angle, taking into account SOG and COG, to plot a wind vector or lay lines in the chart. Wout |
#14
posted to rec.boats.electronics
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True "true wind" & the Raymarine ST60, or other
On Thu, 8 Dec 2005 10:55:01 +1300, "Wout B."
wrote: "Timothy.Rulon" wrote in message ... b393capt wrote: I am just about to buy a bunch of Raymaine instruments for my new B 393, and just found out that the ST60 is limited to using SOW, and won't use GPS SOG & COG, to calculate true wind. After looking thru this forum, I see some references to this issue, but don't see either (1) A way to get true wind on any of the Raymarine instruments, does it work on the Tri data ?? (2) Another vendor who does not have this limitation mentioned. Can anyone help me ? To calculate true wind you also need true heading. SOW, SOG and COG alone won't work as set/drift begin to effect your vessel which will occur as you slow down. At zero speed, a GPS is likely to report anything for COG unless it has a built in aid like a magnetic flux gate compass. There are some expensive GPS receivers which provide true heading by using 2 antennas and lower cost LORAN-C sensor units being developed which does something similar. Should also work great as an input to an autopilot rather than magnetic sensors which can get tricked by magnetic anomolies. I'm not aware of a recreation-priced system which performs all the above but would very much like to hear about it for a government application. For marine weather information, please visit http://www.nws.noaa.gov/om/marine/home.htm This is correct of course, but what is often referred to as "true" wind on a sailboat as opposed to apparent, is relative to the centre line of the boat, but corrected for speed. The T on the ST60 instrument actually stands for "theoretical". Many nav software packages calculate the true wind direction and speed from heading, relative wind angle, taking into account SOG and COG, to plot a wind vector or lay lines in the chart. Wout And I thought the T in ST60 actually stood for 'Talk', part of 'SeaTalk', RayMarine's proprietary data flow protocol! |
#15
posted to rec.boats.electronics
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True "true wind" & the Raymarine ST60, or other
"Bil" wrote in message ... On Thu, 8 Dec 2005 10:55:01 +1300, "Wout B." wrote: "Timothy.Rulon" wrote in message ... b393capt wrote: I am just about to buy a bunch of Raymaine instruments for my new B 393, and just found out that the ST60 is limited to using SOW, and won't use GPS SOG & COG, to calculate true wind. After looking thru this forum, I see some references to this issue, but don't see either (1) A way to get true wind on any of the Raymarine instruments, does it work on the Tri data ?? (2) Another vendor who does not have this limitation mentioned. Can anyone help me ? To calculate true wind you also need true heading. SOW, SOG and COG alone won't work as set/drift begin to effect your vessel which will occur as you slow down. At zero speed, a GPS is likely to report anything for COG unless it has a built in aid like a magnetic flux gate compass. There are some expensive GPS receivers which provide true heading by using 2 antennas and lower cost LORAN-C sensor units being developed which does something similar. Should also work great as an input to an autopilot rather than magnetic sensors which can get tricked by magnetic anomolies. I'm not aware of a recreation-priced system which performs all the above but would very much like to hear about it for a government application. For marine weather information, please visit http://www.nws.noaa.gov/om/marine/home.htm This is correct of course, but what is often referred to as "true" wind on a sailboat as opposed to apparent, is relative to the centre line of the boat, but corrected for speed. The T on the ST60 instrument actually stands for "theoretical". Many nav software packages calculate the true wind direction and speed from heading, relative wind angle, taking into account SOG and COG, to plot a wind vector or lay lines in the chart. Wout And I thought the T in ST60 actually stood for 'Talk', part of 'SeaTalk', RayMarine's proprietary data flow protocol! Haha, You're right! Wout |
#16
posted to rec.boats.electronics
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True "true wind" & the Raymarine ST60, or other
You can also "fool" any NMEA wind instrument by converting the NMEA RMC sentence from the GPS (COG) to VHW (speed thru water). I checked out the web-site, this is very cool !!! Does this work if my wind instrument is Raymarine's (does the ST60 use sea talk ??)? Dan |
#17
posted to rec.boats.electronics
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True "true wind" & the Raymarine ST60, or other
You can also "fool" any NMEA wind instrument by converting the NMEA RMC sentence from the GPS (COG) to VHW (speed thru water). I checked out the web-site, this is very cool !!! Does this work if my wind instrument is Raymarine's (does the ST60 use sea talk ??)? Dan |
#18
posted to rec.boats.electronics
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True "true wind" & the Raymarine ST60, or other
Dan .
Raymarine has a converter available that converts SEA TALK to NMEA and reverse, if you have a Raymarine Radar or chartplotter or FF ,RL/SL series or newer, you can convert most of the data through the insrument in lieu of any converter(external) markvictor |
#19
posted to rec.boats.electronics
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True "true wind" & the Raymarine ST60, or other
Wout B. wrote:
Especially at low sailing speed and strong current, this can make all the difference. The Navman wind instrument can use either SOG or water speed for true wind calculation. You can also "fool" any NMEA wind instrument by converting the NMEA RMC sentence from the GPS (COG) to VHW (speed thru water). A Brookhouse multiplexer will do this for you. You can load a simple script for this conversion. You may need a multiplexer anyway if you are building an integrated instrument system. Hi, You can fool any NMEA wind instrument. But if you have a SeaTalk only instrument, you have to "fool" the SeaTalk device. If someone is interested in playing with it have a look at www.tklinux.de Frank |
#20
posted to rec.boats.electronics
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True "true wind" & the Raymarine ST60, or other
I think you are confusing true wind direction with magnetic wind
direction. To find true wind you need apparent wind (speed and direction) from your masthead and boat speed from your paddle wheel. To find magnetic wind speed/direction you need an instrument system that accepts info from a fluxgate compass to do the calculations. Signet SmartPak system for example. |
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