That's pretty much it anyway.... you can sail a compass heading towards a place (as Tania set out to find Bermuda) and when you get within a 50 - 100 mile range, use the beacon to home in.... You can also triangulate from two or more known beacon sources.... or you can DR and take a number of fixes from the same beacon... just like piloting with visual nav aids.... It's way, way more work that simply looking at your boat's blip on the chart plotter screen... but hey.. what better way to exercise your brain. I actually enjoy piloting with hand bearing compass, chart and chart tools....Also, the range is limited; operationally, on a small boat, you'd already have to be w/in probably 25 to 50 n.mi. of a transmitter. Good enough, perhaps, to prevent a "near miss."
That jogged my foggy memory that I have a portable AM radio direction finder (in a shoreside closet) and a nice sextant (used 2 times). The older charts used to mark AM stations, but if you know a few "clear channel" AM's like 870 WWL New Orleans, you can get a good single fix. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WWL_(AM)However the low cost of ADF and RDF systems, and the continued existence of AM broadcast stations
You forgot current and drift! Ok if you are small lake sailing.Well, if you have been keeping a decent log updated on the hour and you know your compass heading and speed, then you just dead reckon your way to where ever.
I think it would be hard to gauge the utility of RDFs for anything other than finding the direction of "land" from your at-sea location. If I'm cruising near the CA coast, land is east to northeast, sometimes north, of me at all times unless passing between the mainland and the offshore islands, where it might also bear south. So I know where it [land] is and about where I am. I suppose if arriving from, say, Hawai'i in a week of overcast skies with no working GPS running entirely on DR, the RDF might fix the bearing of San Francisco from 40 to 50 n.mi. out by picking up an AM station there, versus, say, Monterey. Getting closer to shore where the fog starts it might even get you to near the Golden Gate if there is a second AM station you can identify and also bear from. But after that? Would two or even three reliable RDF bearings get you safely up to and through the Golden Gate in half-mile visibility? You would also have to know the location of the towers (or beacons if there are any), no? However, I suppose if radar is working you could make it in using that and charted ATONs.That jogged my foggy memory that I have a portable AM radio direction finder (in a shoreside closet) and a nice sextant (used 2 times). The older charts used to mark AM stations, but if you know a few "clear channel" AM's like 870 WWL New Orleans, you can get a good single fix.
This is the main reason my non-military RFD is in the closet.I think it would be hard to gauge the utility of RDFs for anything other than finding the direction of "land" from your at-sea location.
After a quick look at the .pdf at the link below, it appears that the U.S. no longer operates RDF stations; although it does operate RAD (radar beacon) stations. Canada does, however, have many RDF stations listed for emergency use, as does the U.K. Evidently, a mariner may ask his position to be fixed via the RDFs ashore after a prepared VHF transmission from his vessel at sea. This would be independent of AIS which would not work if GPS were shut down. This activity would not have anything to do with bearing off of AM radio stations.I am still trying to determine if these beacons still exist. Even my go-to ham radio guy didn't know.
Yup. Just another reason I prize some of my 25 year old charts. Of course, I have newer ones, too.You would also have to know the location of the towers (or beacons if there are any), no?
Well...if you think you might simply want to know where north America is....I guess you might have a point. That would be the Christopher Columbus school of navigating. But.... if you are trying to fix your position for a DR update, or if you are trying to determine the direction of a distress call without DSC assistance, or any other applications that might involve knowing where you are in relation to a fixed point then .... there might still be some use for the device.I think it would be hard to gauge the utility of RDFs for anything other than finding the direction of "land" from your at-sea location.
OK I followed the electrical lines over the weekend undoing wire bundles and cabin liner. I found that the fan behind the chart plotter wouldn't run unless two switches were both on. Never did this in five years of owning the boat. It ran for three hours last night here in Titusville, Fl with temps in the 80's. Now I just have to figure out how to get the little data boxes back on the screen.
All U Get
Yep we carry a slew of GPS devices on-board too as well as a huge pack of Li AA batteries and also all of my "old school" DR tools and paper charts...Plan A - mounted MFD chartplotter (antennae 1)
Plan B - old Raymarine chartplotter at the nav station (antennae 2)
Plan C - Garmin battery powered 640 GPSmap. (built in antenna)
Plan D - Garmin GPS 76Map handheld (built in antenna)
Plan FUBAR- Garmin 88 handheld in the ditch bag
Nice work!Thank you for contacting the USCG Navigation Center. The last marine Radio
Direction Finder (RDF) beacon was phased out in 2000. The airport RFFs were
slated to be decommissioned in 2015. It is technology from a bygone era that
was too expensive to maintain when considering the advances offered by GPS
and radar position fixing.
You all forgot the ZOMBIES!!Get out you sextants (and spear guns) when the Zombies attack and take over AM stations.![]()