Tagged ‘Touch-Screen’
McMurdo SmartFind
Similar to ACR’s ResQFix PLB, McMurdo has introduced a GEPIRB (GPS-equipped Emergency Position Indicating Radio Beacon) that’s
smaller yet supposedly performs better.
The 1.5-pound SmartFind Plus accomplishes this largely by using LEDs for its strobe, which along with automatic seawater activation, built-in flotation, and longer transmission life are what distinguish EPIRBs from PLBs (plus the fact that some models come with an automatic float-free mount).
Note that Simrad has also introduced a compact GEPIRB in the same price range and that both companies also offer GPS-less models, but those will typically take longer to deliver less-accurate position information to the SAR authorities.
Maestro Maptech
Perhaps you’ve noticed, as I have, that one of the features particularly intriguing to many electronics shoppers these days are those
slick virtual engine-gauge screens you can pull up on many a multifunction display (MFD). Never mind for a moment that most of those MFDs can’t yet connect to many engine models; instead, imagine how those screens would look if you ran a company that makes umpteen real marine engine gauges every year.
Many of its current gauges—there are some 10,000 models if you count all the available colors and the various brand names they’re sold under—feature a little data LCD in addition to a traditional pin and dial. Moreover, the company’s MG2000 system includes a powerful microprocessor that’s built into a gauge: like casing and able to talk with all sorts of engine control modules (ECMs), then mix the data with other inputs to do calculations like fuel flow, and finally rebroadcast everything to a network of less-intelligent gauges. Read the rest of this entry »













