Best solutions for Newport-Caribbean - Printable Version +- MacSailing.net (https://macsailing.net/mybb) +-- Forum: MacSailing.net (https://macsailing.net/mybb/forum-3.html) +--- Forum: General (https://macsailing.net/mybb/forum-4.html) +--- Thread: Best solutions for Newport-Caribbean (/thread-2191.html) |
- leecarlson - October 23, 2012 This is a newbie question, but I'd appreciate all advice. I'm delivering a Beneteau 49 from the Northeast U.S. to the Caribbean. I'm old school, started doing this 40 years ago when the big new technological innovation was RDF, and used to do it with paper charts, compass and watch. So for the past few years Chartplotters have been state of the art for me, but have decided it's time to come out of the dark ages and learn/use plotting software, etc. I have a MacBook Pro running Mountain Lion, with BootCamp if I need to run software from the evil empire. I've purchased and played around with MacENC, but that's it. The boat will have an Iridium Sat phone, but no single sideband. Looking for recommendations for the best setup: do I need GPSNavX and the external GPS? Can MacENC be used offshore? (The charts I have for it now don't go to Bermuda or the Caribbean.) Is there a way to get weather and Gulf Stream info into the Mac while at sea through the Iridium phone? Is there better routing software that would calculate the fastest route given wind and current predictions, as you would use in a race like Newport-Bermuda? So many questions... Hoping to make this a learning experience. Thanks! - georgelewisray - November 6, 2012 Iridium Wx: This is an interest of mine and something I have done but am not fluent in so here is a summary from a friend with whom have did many miles offshore in N&S Atlantic back in 2007. He did Labrador, Greenland and then the NW passage last year. He has sailed about 50,000 offshore in the last 10 years. Iridium is his primary means of Wx ( http://www.issuma.com/rhudson/issumaboat/WeatherForecastsOnIssuma.htm ) The MacOS is a detail that adds a bit of complexity since there are still a few more WX tools in the MSwindows domain but that is changing fast, the trick is to just get an email link going as a way to get the data in the computer. I personally like ZyGRIB multi-platform program for GRIB viewing ( http://www.zygrib.org ). Note: My friend was in the S Atlantic when he wrote this.... **************************************************** Iridium Weather: I have a pre-paid card for Iridium service with satellitephonestore.com (i think). I have a uuplus.net email account (it is not feasible to use iridium for email without a uuplus.net or similar account to help with compression/speedup and minimize $$$ bandwidth). I use saildocs to send me grib files. I do not have a saildocs account or subscription. You can email query@saildocs.com with a body of: send grib-info for more details. The grib files I am currently using are emailed to me daily. I receive these for (default) 10 days because I sent the following email to query@saildocs.com (subject is not necessary): sub gfs:22S,35S,38W,55W|2,2|6,12,18,24,30,36,42,48,60,72,96,120,144,168|PRMSL,WIND That gives me the GFS (as opposed to another model called NOGAPS) forecast for the area 22S to 35S, 38W to 55W, with pressure at sea level and wind speed/direction. If you send the above email with a "send" instead of "sub", then you will get that grib file just once, not daily. If you change the "sub" to "cancel" it will cancel that subscription. You can append (no quotes) time=0700 days=5 to the command (on the same line) to receive it at 0700 UTC, and only for 5 days instead of the default 10 days if you wish. There are a bunch of other options, but changing the lat/long and the time and the number of days is about all I ever do. Either via uuplus.net's WebFetch (part of their email program), or saildocs, I also get the GMDSS Metarea 5 and 6 forecasts daily. From saildocs, that would require an email of: sub Met.5 sub Met.6n From WebFetch, the configuration just requires the time to get it and the URLs: http://weather.gmdss.org/navimail/GMDSS_METAREA5_INMARSAT http://weather.gmdss.org/navimail/GMDSS_METAREA6_N-60_INMARSAT If you're planning on doing this at sea, it would be worthwhile getting all the subscriptions setup soon and getting familiar with requesting and receiving the daily grib forecasts before getting the Iridium phone & uuplus account. *************************** - georgelewisray - November 7, 2012 Check out this blog which is chock full of good info on high tech Wx stuff. The URL is pointing a just one section on Iridium stuff ..... http://blog.francis-fustier.fr/en/tag/iridium/ |