E
ex-admin
Regardless of where you sail, there always seems to be a need for navigation. For daysails and short distances, perhaps all we need are some paper charts, a divider and a compass... or even a trained pair of eyeballs. But as the distances increase, so does the need for more sophisticated navigation devices, like GPS.Since its introduction, the prices of GPS units have dropped dramatically. Yet the capabilities of these devices have increased many times. This has resulted in many boaters owning and using some form of GPS as a principal -- or only -- navigation tool aboard. GPS units can help you find your way home in fog --- or take you unerringly across the ocean to a distant destination. But it was not always so. Not too many years ago, the principal form of "serious" navigation was the sextant, a somewhat expensive, elaborate, and difficult device. Many distance sailors today continue to use a sextant and celestial navigation as their principal or secondary means of navigation. What's your preferred means of navigation? Does paper beat diodes, is glass and gears better than local knowledge?Do you have complete trust in your favorite navigation tools, or do you back it up with older or newer technologies? Tell us about your navigation tools then take the Quick Quiz on the homepage.(Discussion topic and quiz by Warren Milberg)
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