Let me touch on some of your points and question as to functionality. My current control head has a dial that allows rapid course correction, the two sets of buttons, the +1 and +10 degrees to port or starboard. In autopilot mode, when turning the dial each beep is a degree in the direction you are turning it. There is a button on the unit that turns off the autopilot and that dial will simply drive the boat as if it were wheel steering. Having both of these functionalities on the control unit no longer exists. At least by Ray Marine - I haven't checked other options yet as the unit still works even though I no longer have the remote unit.
You were led wrong by Raymarine, or misunderstood them. Their P70RS controller does all of that. Our Simrad controller does also, so that function exists in other brands (and has existed for many years, as it is a primary power-boat function).
p70Rs | Power boat Autopilot Control Head | Raymarine
I don't know why this type of control head is marketed toward power boats, because like you I find these knob and manual steering functions extremely useful on a sailboat. So much so that we usually steer the boat around anchorages and the like with the knob rather than the wheel.
I'd be interested in hearing what you feel are the fantastic advances that I could pine for?
The main advantage is performance. The rate compass of the current models is so much further advanced from the old compass that they aren't even comparable. The new AP's anticipate boat and sea conditions based on 9-axes of movement, which allows the pilot to make adjustments to the steering in advance of the boat reacting to the conditions. They don't react - they anticipate like a human. I know you think your current pilot steers your boat well, but you would just need to take my word that after using the new systems, you will look back and realize the old one didn't steer that well.
Otherwise, you don't seem to care about functionality beyond steering to a compass course, so there won't be any additional advantages of going new.
Somewhere in the conversation it was mentioned these electronic gadgets make long distance sailing safer as you can arrive at your destination faster.
I think you misunderstood this discussion. It wasn't about electronics per se, but about how having accurate polars for the boat in different conditions and different sail choices allows more accurate weather routing. This does have some safety component, and can allow a faster passage.
The electronics bit came up in the discussion of how to generate these accurate polars, which isn't a small feat. Just grabbing the polar from the manufacturer isn't very accurate because those are calculated polars based on the boat design for a boat that was probably never built as designed, and certainly no longer meeting the original criteria.
That comparison, however poorly done, was aimed at how we don't design and build electronics to be fixable. It's discard and buy new and who cares how much impact that has on the end user. It's this throwaway mentality, coupled with us as consumers feeding into it with our desires to buy new with new bells and whistles. And all of that couched in what I consider a lie - the "it's safer" lie.
The inability to fix electronics is inversely proportional to the robustness and longevity of the electronics. It is a very good thing these small electronics are now single integrated circuits optically bonded directly to the display inside a completely sealed housing. All of the problems like moisture in the screens, polarizing film burning, electrolytic caps popping, ribbon connectors between sub-boards breaking, etc are gone. The entire instrument is basically a chip bonded to a screen.
How do you fix something like that? All components are microscopic surface mounts, and all functionality is contained in a single microprocessor. The displays are bonded, so not replaceable. It is like complaining that a modern computer containing a microprocessor with integrated memory, floating point processing, ALU, GPU, I/O, etc is no longer fixable like the old ones that had separate chips for all the functions.
Or like complaining you can no longer replace vacuum tubes in your TV or radio.
Mark