13. Route Planning; Introduction - Furuno FEA-2107 Operator's Manual

Electronic chart display and information system (ecdis)
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13. Route Planning

13.1

Introduction

A route plan defines the navigation plan from starting point to the final destination. The plan includes:
Route name
Name, latitude and longitude of each waypoint
Radius of turn circle at each waypoint
Safe channel limits
Chart alarm calculation based on channel limits against chart database and user chart danger
Deadband width
Minimum and maximum speed for each leg
The navigation method (rhumb line, great circle)
Fuel saving
ETD for the first waypoint
ETA for the last waypoint
Ship and environmental condition affecting the ship speed calculation
Name of the user chart to use during route monitoring together with this planned route
Name of the pilot data to use during route monitoring together with this planned route
Using the above-mentioned data, the system calculates speed, course and length for each leg, ETAs for each
waypoint, fuel consumption and WOP for the Trackpilot. It also calculates safe water areas based on user-defined
channel limits. The calculated data is displayed in tabular form, which can be printed as a documented route plan
and also stored in a file for later use. The route files thus formed contain the trackpilot commands for each waypoint.
Main functions of route planning are:
Define waypoints
Define turnings for each waypoint
Define channel limits for each leg (a leg is the line connected between two waypoints). The channel limits are
used to detect chart alarms when you are planning or monitoring your route.
Define the speed for each leg
Calculation for ETD and ETA
Calculation for most economical sailing
13-1

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