Yearly Archive: 2011

MIBS #4:  FLIR & PYI Seaview, Furuno & Oceanview 3

MIBS #4: FLIR & PYI Seaview, Furuno & Oceanview

PYI_Seaview_3FL_Pod_cPanbo.jpg

Here’s a clever idea.  PYI worked with FLIR to create an accessory podlet for several of its Seaview MFD pods that serves as an integral casing for a relatively inexpensive (“just over $2,500”) thermal camera core.  The core’s output goes to the video input of whatever MFD is mounted on the working side of the pod so the user then has a simple forward-looking thermal view that can even be aimed using the pan and tilt abilities of the pod.  There’s a major limitation to this idea — the fact that thermal can’t see through glass or plastic — but I can think of situations where it might make a lot of sense…

MIBS #3:  Fugawi, Rose Point, MapTech, & Nobeltec Trident 27

MIBS #3: Fugawi, Rose Point, MapTech, & Nobeltec Trident

Fugawi_ENC_with_Avia_Motor.JPG

I sense that PC-based navigation is about to enjoy a renaissance after a long period during which rapidly-advancing MFDs stole its thunder.  I can think of several reasons (and you may have more):  Decent performance PCs have gotten less expensive and tougher; NMEA 2000 can feed them more data, more easily (thanks in large part to Actisense); the various mobile platforms so many of us want to fool with on board usually relate well to the less mobile platforms that can also work well on many boats; and, finally, MaxSea and Furuno are showing everyone how powerfully a PC can fit into high-end marine electronics systems.  One company that will participate in this renaissance, I’m pretty sure, is Fugawi…

Chetco SeaSmart.Net modules, wide open N2K-to-Ethernet? 74

Chetco SeaSmart.Net modules, wide open N2K-to-Ethernet?

Chetco_SeaSmart_NMEA_2000_Wifi_Module.JPG

Chetco Digital Instruments has been quietly developing software and hardware to digitize and display analog engine info for some time, and with some success I hear.  But as of yesterday’s big press release, Chetco has jumped big time into marine data networking, particularly the hot, if confusing, area of putting NMEA 2000 messages into an Ethernet format and serving them to whatever wired and wireless devices can use them.  So that little $579 SeaSmart device above contains an N2K-to-Ethernet gateway (by Actisense, I think), a WiFi transciever, and a “CGI/AJAX web server” that puts out an “open sourced HTML protocol” that will purportedly support “any application from weather station, dual engines, battery banks, fluid tanks and more.” Excited yet?…

MIBS #2:  KVH V3, Intellian s6HD, & SeaTel ST24 4

MIBS #2: KVH V3, Intellian s6HD, & SeaTel ST24

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Mid-sized yachts (and workboats) hungry for connectivity have to be pleased with KVH’s introduction of the TracPhone V3 mini-VSAT in Miami.  The appeal is fast “Internet access and e-mail for just $0.99 per MB along with crystal-clear voice calls worldwide for only $0.49 per minute with no fine print and no hassles” via an antenna only 14.5″ in diameter and 25 pounds.  The original V7 was way smaller than other VSAT antennas when it was introduced in 2007 — still is, I think — and check the difference.  Note too how much KVH has extended its mini-VSAT service coverage.  The hardware cost is still pretty high, but if you watch the animated V3 presentation, it’s clear that KVH now sees mini-VSAT’s low service prices as a real challenge to even Inmarsat’s small Fleet Broadband systems (which it also distributes)…

MIBS #1, all about me 17

MIBS #1, all about me

I’m a little hazy about my Miami International Boat Show history — twelve in a row, I think — but I’m pretty sure this has been the best yet.  One highlight was planing a...

Garmin GSD 26, serious sonar w/ CHIRP 27

Garmin GSD 26, serious sonar w/ CHIRP

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So now a CHIRP war is breaking out.  This morning Garmin announced two new black box fishfinders:  The GSD 24 appears to be a $700 redesign of its previous top-of-the-line digital box while the $2,000 GSD 26 is an obvious play for the truly serious fishing crowd.  The GSD 26 features “Spread Spectrum” technology, which seems to be another name for the CHIRP support that Simrad announced as part of its new BSM-2 box in September.  In fact, both Garmin and Simrad will be running demos of their advanced fishfinding over the next couple of days off Miami, and I’ll be taking a ride with each…

Maretron IPG100, the missing link, sort of? 29

Maretron IPG100, the missing link, sort of?

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Wow, Maretron just released the IPG100, an “Internet Protocol Gateway” that can take all the NMEA 2000 PGNs on a backbone, turn them into TCP/IP data packets, and serve them out an Ethernet port.  Which means of course that the data can then be routed by cable to a vessel’s local network of computers (and other fixed Ethernet gear) and by WiFi to an infinite assortment of onboard mobile tablets, apps phones, etc.  Obvious too is that an IP gateway could also be adept at sending data off a vessel, and vice versa, for remote monitoring, troubleshooting, and more.  And Maretron’s IPG100 consumes only 0.5 amps of N2K backbone power at most and its $595 price tag includes much more than I’ve already described.  Or much less, depending on your point of view!…

PolarView, ready for prime time? 36

PolarView, ready for prime time?

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I took a peek at PolarView NS charting software about a year ago, but didn’t write about it because I wasn’t especially impressed (and there’s a certain randomness to what I cover anyway).  But times change and software develops, and I’m here to tell you that PolarView 1.5 (video introduction here) is pretty darn impressive.  Given its app-like $40 price tag, it’s a remarkably powerful program that runs on Windows, Mac OS X, and Linux operating systems.  The screen above shows PV running on my little ASUS Eee PC 1000HE 10-Inch netbook
with live NMEA 0183 data coming from the lab’s N2K network via a Maretron USB 100.  PolarView is quite unusual in that it uses a sister program, called PolarCOM, to do all its data interfacing and instrument displays…