Per Garmin Tech Support and to  clarify Bill’s comment below.  Garmin’s units 
with Wifi built in do not require the $200 adaptor kit. 

 

From: CnC-List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Joel Aronson 
via CnC-List
Sent: Monday, February 02, 2015 11:13 AM
To: Bill Coleman; [email protected]
Subject: Re: Stus-List Latest Chartplotters.

 

Bill,

 

Wifi is built into the Ray for the Ray phone/tablet apps.  Not for a laptop.

I agree the old Ray stuff was not user-friendly, but the current stuff really 
is!

Let us know what you select.

 

Joel

35/3

Annapolis

 

On Mon, Feb 2, 2015 at 12:07 PM, Bill Coleman via CnC-List 
<[email protected]> wrote:

Lots of great info, thanks to all for their input.

In reading the manuals many things become more clear.

Garmin is a little more forthright in acknowledging that you need to pony up 
another 200 for a wifi module, and 300 for radio, 

Had to dig a little deeper in the Zeus to find that out. I am puzzled why they 
don’t build wifi in, it is in my dashcam and that is tiny and cheap.

It looks to me that it IS built into the e7 Raymarine, can anyone clarify that?

On the pictures of the back of the Zeus 8 it has Simrad molded into the case, 
so I guess that is what it really is.

The reason I had not considered the Raymarine is that after going from a 
Garmin, which I consider very intuitive, the Ray was confounding, and poorly 
thought out, at least the RL-80.

They seem to be making much nicer stuff now, especially since Jeppeson  
acquired them.

JF, do you know if my Raymarine Autopilot will work seamlessly with the Zeus?  
It is 0183, the MKII around 10 years old.

And thanks to Fred for the Garmin offer.

 

 

Bill Coleman

C&C 39

 

From: CnC-List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Jean-Francois J Rivard via CnC-List
Sent: Saturday, January 31, 2015 8:01 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Stus-List Latest Chartplotters.

 

My response to Chuck got scrubbed again.. I need to stop trying to send from 
the phone... 

Here goes:  

The laylines are not necessarily set at any particular angle.. That's the 
genius of it. It analyzes how you are pointing / running relative to apparent 
wind speed, current, tides, direction, wind shifts, and boat speed then does 
the trigonometry for the layline angle that gives the optimal tack / jibe point 
to max-out your vmg to waypoint.

During that race I followed it precisely, gained 2 tacks over 5 miles.. 

Sent from IBM Notes Traveler

Chuck S --- Re: Stus-List Latest Charplotters --- 


From:

"Chuck S" <[email protected]>


To:

"Jean-Francois J Rivard" <[email protected]>, "CNC boat owners, cnc-list" 
<[email protected]>


Date:

Sat, Jan 31, 2015 2:01 PM


Subject:

Re: Stus-List Latest Charplotters

 

  _____  


That zeus sounds interesting.    Would be nice to have the laylines.  Are they 
set at 45 dgrees?  Can you set them lower?

Chuck
Regards


  _____  





François Rivard

 4111 Northside Pkwy, Nw




Big Data Black Belt

 Atlanta, 30327-3015


IBM Sales & Distribution, Software Sales

 Usa


Mobile:

770-639-0429

 




e-mail:

[email protected]

  




 


 

 


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-- 

Joel 
301 541 8551

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