I hooked it up to a i70 and p70 by Raymarinewhat display at the helm do you use with this transducer
I hooked it up to a i70 and p70 by Raymarinewhat display at the helm do you use with this transducer
How do you use this when tacking through North?All you need to get true wind direction (a number not a feeling) is a boat compass. Sail close hauled on both tacks then average the headings for your true wind direction.
As it has been pointed out several times [to Joe], the true wind direction and one's point of sail have next to nothing to do with each other. Point of sail (e.g., closed-hauled) is relative to the apparent wind; so you're not likely going to ascertain TRUE wind direction by averaging [uncorrected?] compass headings which are themselves defined by the apparent wind direction [when close-hauled, in this case].All you need to get true wind direction (a number not a feeling) is a boat compass. Sail close hauled on both tacks then average the headings for your true wind direction.
It's not entirely precise to say that the true wind angle and point of sail have nothing to do with each other. The apparent wind angle (and therefore point of sail) is a function of true wind angle, true wind speed, and boat speed. Therefore, assuming the same boat speed and wind speed, sailing close hauled on each tack will mean that you're sailing the same true wind angle on both tacks. While it's impossible to determine what that true wind angle is just using one tack, looking at compass angles on both tacks and averaging does allow you to determine true wind direction. It will be less effective in gusty or shifting winds.As it has been pointed out several times [to Joe], the true wind direction and one's point of sail have next to nothing to do with each other. Point of sail (e.g., closed-hauled) is relative to the apparent wind; so you're not likely going to ascertain TRUE wind direction by averaging [uncorrected?] compass headings which are themselves defined by the apparent wind direction [when close-hauled, in this case].
Basically, you've got it... although you should never confuse apparent wind angle with point of sail. A very slow moving boat will have similar true and apparent wind data. But faster sailboats... racing dinghies, multi hulls etc... will have vastly different values because of their higher speeds. Actually, in gusty, shifty conditions... noting the close hauled headings as you tack upwind, will give you super data on changes in the true wind direction and velocity. Tactical electronic compasses do this exact thing. They memorize previous headings to indicate wind shifts, and those are true wind shifts, not apparent.It's not entirely precise to say that the true wind angle and point of sail have nothing to do with each other. The apparent wind angle (and therefore point of sail) is a function of true wind angle, true wind speed, and boat speed. Therefore, assuming the same boat speed and wind speed, sailing close hauled on each tack will mean that you're sailing the same true wind angle on both tacks. While it's impossible to determine what that true wind angle is just using one tack, looking at compass angles on both tacks and averaging does allow you to determine true wind direction. It will be less effective in gusty or shifting winds.
The easiest way... is to add 360 to the equation. Add and divide by 2.... if the answer is over 360, you would subtract out the 360.How do you use this when tacking through North?
Geohan
Please explain why it would make a difference? The tape is only connected to a small single point on the shroud. Shouldn't make a difference if the shroud is angled imo. It's still guided by wind direction.After I reviewed what I said about the shroud indicators, I realized that my boat has spreaders and lowers are swept back. This may read differently than shrouds that are even with or forward of the mast. I would have corrected that in my post but editing is a pain on the app.
Yeah it's one of my all time favorites even if it's not an actual portrayal.Doc,.....I'm your Huckleberry (been watching Thumbstone again)Makes sense I reck'n.
Geez Louise! I'm not confusing POS diagrams with the boat's wind gauge. FYI: I'm an ASA Instructor. Someone needs to annotate those diagrams to explain that the WIND direction (arrow at the top) is the APPARENT wind direction unless the boat is either fixed (as it is in the diagram-but which never happens on the water), pointing head to wind, or headed dead down wind. Maybe I'll fix those diagrams some day myself. Hey--dudes, if you want to know the "True" wind direction using the compass, then put the boat head-to-wind for a second or two and get the (reciprocal) compass heading or bear off to DDW and read it there. Even then you will not have the TRUE wind direction for navigation unless you correct the compass heading to true heading (variation & deviation corrections), etc. On any other heading with boat underway the Point of Sail is relative to the APPARENT wind.The point of sail is ALL about True wind direction. Your mistake is confusing the apparent wind gauge's face with the point of sail diagram. They look similar in that they both relate to the boat's centerline...but they are different data sets.
The point of sail describes aboat's position relative to the wind across the water. Were as the apparent wind indicator, with its mirrored sides, O at the top, 180 at the bottom... shows the direction and speed of the wind as it is sensed when passing over the moving boat, striking the sails.