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Your
GPS Can Kill You
(required
reading for every sailor who uses a GPS)
It all started
normally at the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia in Sydney on the
evening of 9th October 2009.
The
ocean racing crews were busy setting up their boats for the short
(92nm) overnight ocean race to Flinders Islet about 40 nm south
of Sydney and home again. The weather was 25-30 knots from the south
and the seas lumpy but not considered a problem. To many this was
only a short sprint race and they expected to be home for breakfast.
One of the favourites
for the race was the 9 year old maxi yacht Pricewaterhouse Coopers
(PwC), a Reichel Pugh 80. The owner Andrew Short was a very good
and experienced sailor and he had a crew of 18 aboard, most of whom
were very experienced and capable sailors who had campaigned the
boat for the previous two years.
The race started
at 8pm. Six
hours later PwC was a total loss on the rocks at Flinders Islet.
Andrew and another crew member Sally Gordon were lost and the rest
of the crew were lucky to escape the same fate.
How could this
have happened to a modern, well maintained, fully crewed racing
yacht sailing in its home waters?
Just
two reasons
- reliance on GPS and chart plotter for coastal navigation and fatigue.
The Cruising
Yacht Club of Australia has just released its internal investigation
into this disaster and you can read the full story here.
But in a nutshell,
this is what happened.
Andrew always
sailed as the skipper, principal helmsman, tactician and navigator.
On the day in question he had come directly from a full days work
and took command of the boat. He then steered, navigated and skippered
the boat for the next 7 hours until the boat hit Flinders Islet
at approximately 2.35am on 10 October 2009.
In the sea and
wind conditions that night, steering and navigating for 7 hours
straight was not a good idea.
PwC was equipped
with 2 Garmin chart plotters, one of which had a readout on deck
near the starboard wheel. The navigation station below was not used
and the deck readout was the only information Andrew used to navigate
the boat that night.
Flinders Islet
is an unlit, low islet just outside Port Kembla south of Sydney.
It is notoriously difficult to see at night due to the brilliant
haze of shore lights behind it. Before GPS we would all give it
a very wide berth in any heavy weather because we were never sure
where it was.
As PwC approached
Flinders Islet Andrew was comfortable with his position as shown
on the deck readout. They were on port tack and it was only as they
saw the islet that they realised they had overstood it and were
well to the east of it. The boat was eased away to starboard to
clear the northern end of the islet. Andrew was still using the
GPS, and his forward view was obscured by the spinnaker bag hooked
onto the port rail forward.
Close to the
islet the bowman felt the boat surge and saw breaking waves ahead.
He yelled “Come away, Come away” and the boat came right away to
starboard to a heading of about 335 degrees – almost back the way
it came.
But it was not
enough.
PwC hit the
north end of Flinders Islet and was smashed to pieces on the rocks.
Andrew, who was the only one not wearing a Personal Flotation Device
( PFD ) was washed overboard and lost. Sally Gordon was also washed
overboard and lost. The rest of the crew scrambled ashore onto the
islet and were rescued.
the reasons why
Andrew had used
his deck chart plotter to navigate from the start of the race. As
he approached Flinders Islet the navigation gods blinked.
At 2.00 am on
10 October 2009 there were 7 satellites visible above the horizon,
but only 3 were high enough to be usable. Of those 3, 2 were on
courses that differed by less than 20 degrees. Two satellites this
close together cannot give two accurate lines of position. So effectively
PwC’s GPS was working with 2 satellite positions only.
To this you
must add the problems inherent with GPS positioning and yachts.
The GPS antennae on a yacht is usually close to the water and the
boat is heeling and bouncing in the seaway. This made any position
displayed by the chart plotter aboard PwC very suspect indeed.
Interestingly,
there was an underwater tunnelling project underway close by that
used a very sophisticated GPS system whose accuracy was constantly
monitored. They shut down the tunnelling operation at 1.30 am that
morning due to unacceptable errors in their GPS positions.

The Dilution
of Precision (DOP) graph shows the large increase in dilution (increased
error) of the GPS position results between 1500 UTC (2.00am local
time) and 1630 UTC (3.30am local time that morning. The error indicated
by the DOP graph is for a fixed, land based GPS unit. The error
would have been much larger on PwC due to the low antennae, the
angle of heel and the yaw and bounce of the boat.
Andrew was
tired and he was navigating with a system with an error that could
have been up to +/- 100 meters.
As well as
the GPS and chart plotter errors, the guaranteed horizontal accuracy
of the paper chart at Flinders Islet is about +/- 50 meters. Most
of the Australian coast is charted to a guaranteed horizontal accuracy
of +/- 500 meters. These parameters are noted on paper charts but
only on some electronic charts. This means that what is displayed
on the chart plotter needs to be confirmed by other navigational
means and not accepted as anywhere near 100% accurate.
what
are the lessons?
Lesson
1. Don’t think you can do everything on a boat. Spread
the load and make sure the navigator and skipper get enough rest.
Initiate a good watch system and allocate responsibilities before
you leave the dock. PwC had no formal watch system for this race,
and because it was a relatively short one, it is probable that no-one
had any proper rest.
Lesson
2. NEVER, NEVER, NEVER assume the position you see on
any chart plotter, or GPS readout for that matter, is accurate.
It’s only as good as the satellites it can see, and as you can see
from this disaster, the errors that can be introduced without your
knowledge can be fatal.
Lesson
3. Never assume your charts, whether paper or electronic,
are accurate. I’m reminded of the story about the newly qualified
navigator who calculated and plotted his position for his skipper
to the last 1/10th of a nautical mile. He showed his plot to the
old skipper who grunted and placed his open hand over the fix on
the chart and said “So you think we’re somewhere around here”
Lesson
4.
Eyeball navigation 101 is still the best when close to the rocky
bits on the edge. Followed closely by manual 3 point fixes, bearing
and distance off calculations and any fix that uses landmarks and
features you can see.
Save the GPS
for offshore passages where +/- 100 meters is of no consequence.
Lesson
5.
The new PDF's are comfortable and they don't interfere with any
work on a yacht. Always wear one when sailing at night, when sailing
alone or at any time when the wind and sea conditions dictate.
I knew Andrew
and competed against him in many ocean races. Sally Gordon was a
well repected racing navigator. Their deaths are a great loss to
the ocean racing fraternity in Australia.
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