So, we started our cruise about 10 days ago with an overnight sail to the 1000 islands. Navigating into the islands from Lake Ontario can be very tricky, and many people have found out the hard way where the shoals are. To do this at night, an accurate Gps is essential.
At about 2AM, the GPS reported "position lost", and when went into the gps status screen on my E-Wide chart plotters, it found no signal from any satellites.
I rebooted the plotters, and after about 5 minutes I got a gps fix (whew!)
And then it crashed again
Pitch black, 2:30 AM, getting close to some very tricky areas. Needless to say, I was a little concerned.
On the top of the Raystar antenna is a tricolour led which flashes green when it's happy. Mine was flashing red. So, I knew it had power, and it was doing something quasi-intelligent.
I suspected that perhaps water had gotten in, but not sure how that could have happened.
So, with nothing to lose, I removed it from my stern rail, and took it down to the chart table for examination.
The unit is easy to open up with a couple of small Phillips screws.
As soon as I cracked it open, the problem was immediately obvious.
Inside is a 3 volt lithium battery, which is certainly used for storing hot fix data, etc. It was dead as a corpse.
The battery is a 2032 coin cell, which i very luckily had 2 spares aboard for a headlamp flashlight.
Replaced the battery, and 15 minutes later we had our GPS back.
If you own a Raystar 125, make sure you have at least one spare battery. Actually, you should probably just spend 20 minutes and $2 to replace it before you are really counting on your GPS, (like at 2 AM), and it dies on you.
Make sure that when you re-assemble it to put a bit of grease on the O ring which seals the unit from seawater
At about 2AM, the GPS reported "position lost", and when went into the gps status screen on my E-Wide chart plotters, it found no signal from any satellites.
I rebooted the plotters, and after about 5 minutes I got a gps fix (whew!)
And then it crashed again
Pitch black, 2:30 AM, getting close to some very tricky areas. Needless to say, I was a little concerned.
On the top of the Raystar antenna is a tricolour led which flashes green when it's happy. Mine was flashing red. So, I knew it had power, and it was doing something quasi-intelligent.
I suspected that perhaps water had gotten in, but not sure how that could have happened.
So, with nothing to lose, I removed it from my stern rail, and took it down to the chart table for examination.
The unit is easy to open up with a couple of small Phillips screws.
As soon as I cracked it open, the problem was immediately obvious.
Inside is a 3 volt lithium battery, which is certainly used for storing hot fix data, etc. It was dead as a corpse.
The battery is a 2032 coin cell, which i very luckily had 2 spares aboard for a headlamp flashlight.
Replaced the battery, and 15 minutes later we had our GPS back.
If you own a Raystar 125, make sure you have at least one spare battery. Actually, you should probably just spend 20 minutes and $2 to replace it before you are really counting on your GPS, (like at 2 AM), and it dies on you.
Make sure that when you re-assemble it to put a bit of grease on the O ring which seals the unit from seawater