Position.
-
- Master Mariner
- Posts: 200
- Joined: Thu Mar 27, 2008 10:54 pm
Position.
Following my failure to fuel the slightest controversy with the RNLI thread I'm going to have another crack!
Elsewhere there is a discussion going about the RTIR Mayday, where a vessel gave its position relative to St Cats lighthouse.
The CG insisted on a Lat and Long.
Personally, I always find it easier to think of my position relative to something fixed to the ground. One or more nav marks or lighthouse or Island or some such. (Of course mid channel it's easier to read some numbers off the GPS.)
I'd have thought in the event of a mayday it would be even more important to use a simple and unambiguous way to state position. There seems little room for error on either side in 'I'm south of Arran' and rather a lot in reading digits off a display.
If there are multiple boats around the yacht's going to have to identify itself anyway - a Lat/Long still won't be enough to uniquely identify a yacht in a crowd.
Discuss.
Elsewhere there is a discussion going about the RTIR Mayday, where a vessel gave its position relative to St Cats lighthouse.
The CG insisted on a Lat and Long.
Personally, I always find it easier to think of my position relative to something fixed to the ground. One or more nav marks or lighthouse or Island or some such. (Of course mid channel it's easier to read some numbers off the GPS.)
I'd have thought in the event of a mayday it would be even more important to use a simple and unambiguous way to state position. There seems little room for error on either side in 'I'm south of Arran' and rather a lot in reading digits off a display.
If there are multiple boats around the yacht's going to have to identify itself anyway - a Lat/Long still won't be enough to uniquely identify a yacht in a crowd.
Discuss.
- Telo
- Admiral of the Red
- Posts: 2505
- Joined: Wed Jan 05, 2005 9:27 pm
- Boat Type: Vancouver 34 Pilot
- Location: Bampotterie-sur-mer
- Contact:
I fear that you're going to have trouble stirring up any controversy with this one as I'm sure most sailors will agree with you. I'm a bit surprised by the CG's insistence on lat/long (weren't we all taught to report our position in relation to a fixed object?) as they will have experienced plenty of occasions when confusion has been caused by people misreading their GPS, something that we've probably all heard before on Ch16. The other odd thing about such radio exchanges is the "accuracy" of the position reporting down to three decimal places of a minute. Keyboard rools ya .....
- Silkie
- Admiral of the Fleet
- Posts: 3475
- Joined: Sat Mar 05, 2005 12:55 pm
- Boat Type: Hurley 22
- Location: Bonnie Scotland
- Contact:
Sorry but I have to agree too. As a single-hander it's much easier to tell if I'm in the area from "..just north of Insh Island" rather than a stream of possibly garbled digits which I wouldn't immediately be in a position to jot down and would probably have to go below to plot anyway.
different colours made of tears
- sahona
- Admiral of the White
- Posts: 1992
- Joined: Thu Jan 03, 2008 8:17 pm
- Boat Type: Marcon Claymore
- Location: Clyde
So why are we being taught to do the "known point - direction - distance" thingy if the phekkin' coastguard hasn't been trained to repond?
I understood it was because of international language problems where your nearest station may be foreign and 'expecting ' to hear the position information in the correct sequence in order to relay it correctly.
Maybe there is a case for basic minimum training and conforming to rules when nearly 2000 boats are concentrated in a finite area such as the RTIR. It does seem from all the posts in TOP that the CG operator in this case had been through a charisma-bypass operation recently.
I understood it was because of international language problems where your nearest station may be foreign and 'expecting ' to hear the position information in the correct sequence in order to relay it correctly.
Maybe there is a case for basic minimum training and conforming to rules when nearly 2000 boats are concentrated in a finite area such as the RTIR. It does seem from all the posts in TOP that the CG operator in this case had been through a charisma-bypass operation recently.
http://trooncruisingclub.org/ 20' - 30' Berths available, Clyde.
Cruising, racing, maintenance facilities. Go take a look, you know you want to.
Cruising, racing, maintenance facilities. Go take a look, you know you want to.
- Silkie
- Admiral of the Fleet
- Posts: 3475
- Joined: Sat Mar 05, 2005 12:55 pm
- Boat Type: Hurley 22
- Location: Bonnie Scotland
- Contact:
Possibly a risk manager doing his assessment for the RTIR decided that "..just off the Needles" might well include several hundred vessels at peak times and issued an edict that lat/longs must also be obtained despite the fact that this would clearly be unlikely to help much, if at all.sahona wrote:So why are we being taught to do the "known point - direction - distance" thingy if the phekkin' coastguard hasn't been trained to repond?
different colours made of tears
-
- Master Mariner
- Posts: 200
- Joined: Thu Mar 27, 2008 10:54 pm
Re: Position.
Another failure!
I'll never get a job picking topics for Gerry Springer.
The comment on TOP that made me howl with Laughter was the guy who said that the Lat/Long was required for the Helicopter - as though the CG and Chooper crew *between them* couldn't work out a Lat and Long from a distance and bearing!!!
Maybe teaching granny to suck eggs but quoting position to three decimal places isn't *that* stupid. I reckon 1/1000 of a NM is about 1.8m and a GPS fix with a clear view of the sky will be within 15m (Unless you have DGPS or WAAS) so with with a clear view of the sky only the last digit is actually redundant.
Still pointless, 'cos if you care where you are within 18m you shouldn't be using the GPS!

The comment on TOP that made me howl with Laughter was the guy who said that the Lat/Long was required for the Helicopter - as though the CG and Chooper crew *between them* couldn't work out a Lat and Long from a distance and bearing!!!
Maybe teaching granny to suck eggs but quoting position to three decimal places isn't *that* stupid. I reckon 1/1000 of a NM is about 1.8m and a GPS fix with a clear view of the sky will be within 15m (Unless you have DGPS or WAAS) so with with a clear view of the sky only the last digit is actually redundant.
Still pointless, 'cos if you care where you are within 18m you shouldn't be using the GPS!
We should remember that the CG were on strike at the weekend, so I guess there was but one soul in the office on Saturday, handling multiple Maydays over about 200 miles (?) of coastline without getting paid. If I was him/her, I'd want the max information in the simplest, quickest and least ambiguous form possible.
Lat and long, I guess, gets that done. If it's hard for the casualty, how much harder is it for the next casualty that CG isn't getting round to because they are trying to work out which (in a Scottish context) Eilan Dubh we're talking about?
Sorry, I'm just back from a very pleasant dinner with some lovely friends with a deep cellar...
Derek
Lat and long, I guess, gets that done. If it's hard for the casualty, how much harder is it for the next casualty that CG isn't getting round to because they are trying to work out which (in a Scottish context) Eilan Dubh we're talking about?
Sorry, I'm just back from a very pleasant dinner with some lovely friends with a deep cellar...
Derek
Hmmmm
Nice try - but no cigar.
Perhaps a less original choice of subject matter may help. The old favourites from TOP are ensigns, colregs, anchors, Muslims and MMGW.
I would suggest that something along the lines of:-
" Should a Muslim skipper be obliged to wear a blue ensign while anchored with Bruce anchor with a generator running."
Nice try - but no cigar.
Perhaps a less original choice of subject matter may help. The old favourites from TOP are ensigns, colregs, anchors, Muslims and MMGW.
I would suggest that something along the lines of:-
" Should a Muslim skipper be obliged to wear a blue ensign while anchored with Bruce anchor with a generator running."
-
- Master Mariner
- Posts: 200
- Joined: Thu Mar 27, 2008 10:54 pm
- claymore
- Admiral of the Green
- Posts: 4762
- Joined: Sun Oct 19, 2003 2:55 pm
- Boat Type: Claymore
- Location: Ardfern or Lancashire
This thread is complete tosh as its been hijacked by a load of mealy-mouthed compliant agreeable coves who are too scared to disagree with the original post and so wander off into sycophantic babble thinking they are being controversial - or in LJS's case - something else.
So - what is the blasted point in saying "Mayday - I'm just south of blah de blah" when any idiot who can read and has a digital radio - like me - can just spin off the numbers?
Completely negates the point of buying a digital radio - like I did - in the first place
Harrummph
So - what is the blasted point in saying "Mayday - I'm just south of blah de blah" when any idiot who can read and has a digital radio - like me - can just spin off the numbers?
Completely negates the point of buying a digital radio - like I did - in the first place
Harrummph
Regards
Claymore

Claymore

tee heejim.r wrote:Well I think your all wrong. I never know where I am anyway and if they asked me for a position I would'nt have a clue. So I always sail with the radio open so they can home in on me when I get near anything dangerous
When I used to take divers out we had to protect some of our wreck sites, some of my positions I would report in to the coasty to ensure the amateur ribs would not overwhelm us during the day were pretty inventive.
Such as 35 miles nne of Rhyl when we were 5 or 6 miles off Formby was par the course. This is a guess before anyone starts plotting and telling me it is wrong, I am giving an example of form rather than an exact bearing...
oh dear, I think I am too used to TOP.