Become an Expert Small-Craft Radar Operator
Nothing beats radar for guiding your boat through the darkest night or the thickest fog. Radar enables you to plot a fix from just a single buoy or landmark, and it is the only navigation tool that tells you not just where you are, but who else or what else is out there with you. Today’s smaller, affordable, efficient radars make more sense than ever for sailors and powerboaters.
Adopted by the American Sailing Association for their radar course and used by professional and recreational radar training schools around the world, this complete, in-depth manual shows you how to:
- Choose the best radar model for your sailboat or powerboat
- Install, adjust, and operate your system
- Interpret the images on your radar screen
- Pilot your boat and track the movements of vessels around you
- Use radar to track and avoid squalls, outmaneuver competitors in a yacht race, and other specialized tasks
- Interface your radar with a digital compass, GPS, or electronic chart“This book will turn you into an expert on small-craft radar operations. It covers everything–radar choice, installation, use, and how to interface with your electronics. Very comprehensive!” — Boat Books“Stands out among other books on the subject . . . an excellent introduction to radar.” — Power Cruising
“Radar is an electronic tool, the operation of which takes much more interpretation than any other–too little knowledge can be just as dangerous as none. Radar for Mariners helps you understand how radar works, explains its limitations, and shows you how to get the full use of radar’s functions. This book should show up on the radar screen of anyone with radar–or contemplating getting one. I can’t wait to go to my boat and stop playing with my radar and start using it.” — Good Old Boat
Paperback : 243 pages.
Author : David Burch
SKU: P68165
About the Author
David Burch, the director of the Starpath School of Navigation in Seattle, Washington, has been teaching navigation and seamanship since 1977. He has logged more than 60,000 sea miles, including three wins in the trans-Pacific Victoria to Maui yacht race. He is the author of nine books on marine navigation, including Emergency Navigation (International Marine, 1984), and his magazine articles have appeared in Cruising World, Ocean Navigator, Sailing, and Sea Kayaker. He holds a U.S. Coast Guard Master’s license (100 tons). He is also a past Fulbright Scholar and holds a PhD in physics.