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I've played around with this a bit and it's not bad for free. However, downloading files directly from their website is inflexible and results in a rather large file. Their uGrib is much more flexible and shows the files size of your query before downloading it. I'm running it in Parallels and it runs fine.
HOWEVER, I find two major shortcomings:
1 - I find the lack of upper air (500mb) data a major flaw. I even got a grib with upper air data by a direct query to saildocs and openning it in uGrib. While uGrib would show the surface data it would not show the 500mb contours (which MacENC would do).
2 - You must be connected to the internet to get the data - their is no email delivery option. Thus its only good for short term near-shore data where you either get data before departure, or you need a satphone or other internet connection.
Still, for free it's great as long as you're coastal cruising, though a port to the Mac would be useful.
My two cents
Scot
(btw - I've only had my MacBook a few weeks now, moving up from a couple of ibooks, and am VERY impressed by Parallels).
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Will be supported in the next release of MacENC.
Scott Dillon
Sydney Australia
North Shore 38
CYCA
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Bob,
I agree that most sailors downloading gribs are getting it directly from the net as you suggest, and for them grib.us is potentially a great tool, particularly if they expand their offering and port to Mac (for us Mac-ophiles at least). I would classify those as the near-shore cruisers (i.e. wifi or cell phone web access) and/or short range cruisers (1-2 day legs between ports/anchorages and web access and out of cell/wifi range, getting information before departure and depending on VHF or possibly ssb broadcasts for updates). These people are generally cruising in North American and European waters. If you're sailing farther and longer than that (such as a passage from LA to Hawaii or the Marquesas on the way to New Zealand) then you either need satellite or SSB email communications to get gribs, as you have done with your Iridium. Plain and simple, no other options.
As for pros/cons of SSB vs Satellite, I don't think their's much point - everything is in satellite's favor except for cost, and coverage at least for one of the two big satphone companies (Iridiun I recall has pretty good coverage, but the other has big holes globally - I may have it backwards). If you view it as an either/or, then satellite wins on the cost as well, with $1000-1500 upfront investment in the phone plus the plan costs, while SSB is about a $2000 and up initial investment (radio, modem, antenna, antenna tuner, installation, more like $3000+). Satphones can also be rented. However, for most global cruisers it's not an either/or but a SSB for sure and do they also get satellite. So it's an incremental cost and is frequently put as an alternative to a replacement anchor or stormsail or... The reasons being that SSB is used for all sorts of other purposes, including entertainment (BBC etc), WWV for time checks, direct weather fax and weather broadcasts (even if it's a backup), and very importantly for safety and cruising nets. The latter two need broadcast capabilities which takes it well over the Grundig Yachtboy price range. SSB is still the best way to chat with fellow cruisers who may be out of VHF range.
Getting a bit wordy here, but I hope you see my point. I agree with you that for most people grib.us is great. but for a blue-water cruisers it could use more flexible communications options. BTW, I made all these suggestions and a few more directly to grib.us before my first posting and subsequently received a positive and helpful response.
Scot
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I encourage everyone to throw their voice in for a Mac port. It would be the only stand-alone grib viewer and does have more flexibility (at least for now) than viewing them in MacENC/GPSNavX
Also, if anyone is interested in HF (SSB) vs satphone, the SSCA discussion board is probably a better place and has a lot already. Just don't get into an anchor discussion there - it's worse than politics. :wink:
Scot
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I use the NOAA 500mb charts frequently as they are a great way to see what is coming at me in terms of future weather. Now that GRIBs have become my overwhelming interest for the week, I started to look at what was available for 500mb GRIBs. I can't find anything out there that shows both 500mb height AND winds at that height. I have found some that include surface wind with the 500mb isobars, but that doesn't really help as I am interested in how FAST those upper level systems are moving. Anybody found a GRIB that duplicates the NOAA chart?
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Thanks Scot and Luis. I have been over the Singleton site many times and have found much useful info there, but alas no GRIBs that include both the 500mb height AND wind at that height. Ditto for the WeatherNet site which does have both the isobars and wind, but not in one combined GRIB. I have had limited success creating my own "Custom" GRIBs with the GMN GRIB combiner, but that is a kludgy solution at best. What mystifies me about this is the the fact that the NOAA 500mb analysis chart is a very well known and useful tool for forecasting in that it shows the location of the 5640mb isobar and the upper level wind associated with it, both excellent indicators of storm tracks and and the speed of those storms.
Bob Etter
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MacWX (The WeatherNet client for OS X) does not YET have the GRIB combining feature. Once direct connect is supported, then GRIB combining will be possible.
Scott Dillon
Sydney Australia
North Shore 38
CYCA
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A simple intermin solution is to release the GMN grib combiner for MaxOS. Maybe I will do this as my first Mac OSX programming project...
--luis
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MacWX 2.0 supports direct download of the OCENS WeatherNet products. Select the products you want, press request and almost instantly they end up in the downloads folder for immediate use.
http://www.macwx.com
Scott Dillon
Sydney Australia
North Shore 38
CYCA