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Boating NavigatingNavigation lights

Navigation Rules
Delaware law requires that operators obey the rules of the road. There are two terms that help explain the rules of the road: ...

 


Aids To Navigation (ATON) : ( Go To Top ) Along your way you may be able to find several types of navigation aids to assist you in avoiding dangers and shoals along with helping you to determine your position.

Navigation: Estimating Distances at Sea
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Aids to navigation found on federal waters, commonly known as buoys or channel markers, are designed, built and maintained by the United States Coast Guard.

AIDS TO NAVIGATION: Artificial objects external to the boat, that supplement natural landmarks, assisting safe passage by indicating safe and unsafe waters.

SATELLITE NAVIGATION: A form of position finding using radio transmissions from satellites with sophisticated on-board automatic equipment.

That part of a body of water deep enough for navigation through an area otherwise not suitable. It is usually marked by a single or double line of buoys and sometimes by range markers. 2.

NAVIGATION: The art and science of conducting a boat safely from one point to another.
NAVIGATION RULES: The regulations governing the movement of vessels in relation to each other, generally called steering and sailing rules.

Sailors have been using nautical charts and other sail navigation methods to determine their course and watch out for water hazards for many years.

Navigation
The act of determining position, location and course to the destination of an aircraft or a vessel.

navigation lights
At sundown all boats in open water are required to carry lights. The system of lighting differs for each kind of boat.
navigation regulations (or COLREGS) ...

Navigation Equipment:
a sound signaling device or a sound signaling appliance ...

navigation lights - Lights on a boat help others determine its course, position and what it is doing. Boats underway should have a red light visible from its port bow, a green light on the starboard bow and a white light at its stern.

Navigation
~ Understanding Navigation, for writers and readers. The Points of Sail and Ship's Headings.
Port Royal and Tortuga
~ Come read a brief history of these famous pirate havens.

Navigational Formulas
Navigation often requires relatively complicated arithmetic. The most common is compass corrections: converting between true directions and a compass reading.

navigation - The science (or art) of determining a vessel's position and safely guiding it to another position. There are several methods of navigation: coastal (aka piloting), celestial, radionavigation, and GPS.

Navigation rules - Rules of the road that provide guidance on how to avoid collision and also used to assign blame when a collision does occur.

Omega Navigation System - An obsolete worldwide, continuous, radionavigation system of medium accuracy that provideed hyperbolic lines of position through phase comparisons of VLF (10-14 kHz) continuous wave signals transmitted on a common ...

Circumnavigation:
A voyage around the world.
Clap On:
To clap on is to temporarily add something to an existing part.

aid to navigation
Any fixed object that a navigator may use to find his position, such as permanent land or sea markers, buoys, radio beacons, and lighthouses.
akas ...

Aids to Navigation
Artificial objects to supplement natural landmarks indicating safe and unsafe waters.
Alee
Away from the direction of the wind. Opposite of windward.

Navigation lights are a critical part of obeying the Steering and Sailing Rules at night. If you have ever passed close by a vessel operating without lights, you have no doubt gained some appreciation for them.

Navigational Telex, Navtex
Navigation Rules, rules of the road
The rules prescribing how boats should maneuver near each other, the sound signals they must make, and the lights they must show in order to avoid collision.

Navigation by daylight in fine, clear weather is easy, but when it is dark and foggy special precautions must be taken or collision is inevitable.

Navigation aid - usually automatic. Controlled by the coast guard.
Lighthouse Tender
Lightship ...

Navigation equipment can be simple. Charts, including a reasonable area around your intended route, tide table, dividers and parallel rule, sighting compass and, of course, the trusty GPS. A good pair of binoculars can help.

Navigation Rules - The U.S. "Rules of the Road" governing navigation lights, vessels meeting or passing, sound signals, distress signals and practical boating etiquette.
O
Offshore - Out of sight of land.

Navigation
The science of plotting a vessel's route from one position to the next in the least amount of time and with the maximum safety.
Neep Tides ...

Navigation Time - Use 24 hours ( 1400 = 2 pm ) and tenths rather than minutes
Neap Tides - Weakest tides happening during middle of first and third quarter of the moon versus spring tides at the full and new moon ...

The navigation station is at an angle at the aft end of the port berth, with the hinged electrical panel above it and space for electronics close by. Tubed chart stowage is underneath.

Coastal navigation using both GPS and compass
Charter boat operation
Preparing for live aboard life
Outboard motor tuning and maintenance
Advanced docking
Racing school
Catalina tune up clinic
Children's summer sailing camp program
Multihull sailing ...

NAVSAC - Navigation Safety Advisory Council, an industry advisory body to the U.S. Coast Guard.
NDRF - National Defense Reserve Fleet.
NEOBULK - Shipments consisting entirely of units of a single commodity, such as cars, lumber, or scrap metal.

a kind of navigational buoy
Outhaul
the line that adjust tension along the foot of the sail along the boom ...

Nautical Navigation
To find true north using a magnetic compass (one of the Four Great Inventions of ancient China, circa 300 A.D.), the local deviation (also called magnetic declination) must be known to adjust the reading.

Celestial navigation
A method of using the stars, sun and moon to determine one's position.

Isophase Navigation light where duration of light and dark are equal.
Jack - Stay A bar or rope on which anything travels e.g. a rope leading along the deck, to which safety harnesses may be clipped.

Sextant: A navigational instrument used to determine the vertical position of an object such as the sun, moon or stars. Used with celestial navigation.
Spinnaker: A very large lightweight sail used when running or on a broad reach.

German Classification Society GLONASS GLobal NAvigation Satelitte System
GMDSS Global Maritime Distress and Safety System.

plot
To plan a navigation course using a chart.
poling platform
Small elevated stand on a flats boat used by a fisherman to silently pole through shallow water and scout for fish.

Can - a kind of navigation buoy
Capsize - to turn a boat over
Cast Off - to release lines holding boat to shore or mooring, to release sheets ...

buoy -- floating marker used for navigation
cabin sole --the bottom surface of the enclosed space under the deck of a boat
canvas -- slang for sail. Originally sails were made of canvas.
catamaran -- twin hulled boat ...

To command a ship and its crew cardinal mark A navigation aid used in the Uniform State Waterway Marking System that is color-coded to indicate the compass direction around which it should be passed.

Backstaff a navigation instrument used to measure the apparent height of a landmark whose actual height is known, such as the top of a lighthouse. From this information, the ship's distance from that landmark can be calculated.

and steered; also, the officer(s) on duty in the command area BULKHEAD nautical equivalent of wall BULWARKS fence-like guard along edge of deck BUNK bed, berth BUOY floats of a variety of designs and shapes, usually moored, used as navigational aids, ...

Buoy - floating aid to navigation.
Can - cylinder shaped buoy used for mooring
Capsize - turn upside down or (what increases as your boat gets nicer.)
Cast Iron Genoa- a sail boat's engine
Cavitate- The entry of air into the prop ...

COMPASS The compass is the most important instrument of navigation in use on board ship, the path of a ship through the water depending on the efficient working and use of this instrument.

sector: a colored segment in the sweep of a navigation light. A red sector, for example, warns of dangerous waters. scull: propel a boat by means of one oar over the stern.

can buoyCylindrical navigation buoy with a flat top, generally green in color. capsizeTo flip a boat over. capstanA winch used for hauling heavy objects such as anchors. cast offTo unfasten all lines in preparation for departure.

Can - a type of navigation buoy
canvas -- old slang term for sail. Originally sails were made of canvas.
Cap A piece of trim, usually wood, used to cover and often decorate a portion of the boat, i.e., caprail.

Ships navigation officer. Keeps charts (maps) up to date and monitors navigation equipment on bridge. THIRD MATE -In charge of eight to twelve watch. Makes sure emergency survival equipment (lifeboats, life rings, etc.) are in order.

DECKHAND - Seaman who works on the deck of a ship and remains in the wheelhouse attending to the orders of the duty officers during navigation and manoeuvring.
DECK LOG - Also called Captain's Log.

Chart: A map that is used in navigation
Chine: The edge between the side of the boat and the bottom; it is called a chine only in boats in which the angle between the two actually forms an angle ...

But the development of the ship and of the art of navigation clearly belongs to the Phoenicians. It is tantalizing to find that the earliest and almost the only evidence that we have of this development is to be gathered from Assyrian representations.

Piloting - Navigation by use of visible references, the depth of the water, etc.
Planing - A boat is said to be planing when it is essentially moving over the top of the water rather than through the water.

constructed of piles (see PILE) PILOTING Navigation by use of visible references, the depth of the water, etc. PLANING A boat is said to be planing when it is essentially moving over the top of the water rather than through the water.

a vessel engaged in laying, servicing or picking up a navigation mark, submarine cable or pipeline;
a vessel engaged in dredging, surveying or underwater operations; ...

They place a collapsible sailing rig and simple navigational equipment (a plastic sextant, a compass, a calibrated quartz watch and a nautical almanac) in the dinghy. The rig should include a mainsail that can be reefed for storms, and a sea-anchor.

The Admiralty Chart is the gold standard, the true north, the understanding of centuries of navigational and hydrographical lore, distilled into two dimensions and six square feet.

Buoy: A marker used for navigation, mooring, or racing around.
Cam Cleat: A mechanical cleat used to hold a line automatically. It uses two spring-loaded cams (teeth) that come together to clamp the line, which is placed between them.

A ship is a large watercraft capable of offshore navigation. Ships may be operated by governments (military, rescue, research, transportation), private companies and institutions (transportation, offshore resources, research), ...

See also: Boat, Sailing, Line, Point, Wind