Let's look at Ernie's original post...
Ernie expresses enough frustration to wonder outloud if he should just stay in the 20th century and use (accurate, cheap if using reprints from a professional service...or a cost-effective chart kit) paper charts. He tells us he sails out of Kemah, TX which means he benefits from an excellent IALA Bravo buoyage system (as do, I suspect, most of you...), and let's remember that he's most likely been benefiting from and using GPS for many years now, in the last few years with an accuracy the width of a *really* sharp pencil point.Electronic charting is wonderful. My wife and I have been huge benefactors of it. But we've been in a lot of strange water over the last four years, most of it not buoyed and not well covered by NIMA or BA charts (nor others with which I'm familiar). This is my confession that I just don't 'get it'. For most sailors - who sail in local and/or coastal waters they already know, who have GPS aboard, and who mostly sail in daylight hours - it is truly unclear to me from where the presumption comes(that's how it usually comes across) that electronic charting is a 'must', as essential as well filtered diesel fuel or food in the fridge.I'd welcome someone filling me in; I really am perplexed. A full kit of uptodate NOAA charts for your home waters is available for perhaps $50. (See www.tidesend.com, who are just one of many chart reprinters; excellent copy, high grade paper, latest NIMA or NOAA chart). These and a GPS are all that's needed for (I'm totally guessing!) 90% of us here. Basic electronic charting, using one set of electronic charts for your homeport & regional waters, is available for peanuts (considering using e.g. OziExplorer as our charting program). The 2-week family-aboard vacation doesn't usually take the Mother Ship more than 300 NM from homebase, given weather & sightseeing ashore. Where does this need to have integrated charting systems at much larger expense come from? What sustains it in the face of many of us having fewer dollars to spend on our hobbies than we'd like? And since it rarely adds safety (assuming there's a semi-competent navigator board + a functional GPS and good charts), what's driving us to have it? Keeping up with the Jones'? Because we think we 'should' keep up with technology, whether it's actually needed or not?Or...dare I say it...is it just laziness coupled with indulgence?Ernie, you're asking the right question: SHOULD you indeed switch to electronic charting? I don't know what *your* answer should be, but the flood of 'use this' answers may not be the ones you SHOULD - at the end of the day - choose from. Ask yourself what your boat & family need to be safe and enjoy sailing.JackJack