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Supply and Installation Precision Navigation offers a comprehensive supply of marine products, including an installation service if required, to the weekend sailor through to the offshore yachtsman.
We pride ourselves on our competitively priced products backed up with service second to none.
Our aim is to provide a professional and impartial service, using our combined experience of over 40 years in the technical marine trade to allow owners to make the best possible choices for their boat. We are able to oversee and project manage the supply and professional installation of equipment to the most exacting standards and schedules.
Choosing your electronics is just the start to providing your yacht with the right navigation and communication equipment. The next step is to have it installed correctly. At Precision Navigation our team of highly experienced and trained engineers will install your electronics in the most appropriate manner. Their proffessional attitude dictates the high level of care and consideration that your vessel deserves.
Don't hesitate to contact us for more details and to discuss our consultation service more fully.
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Swan 48 Intergrated Computer System | |
We recently undertook the supply and installation of a fully integrated computer system on a Swan 48 with a marinised computer and flat screen monitor. A touch screen waterproof sunlight viewable repeater in the cockpit complimented the system.
Both screens are able to display software charts, Navtex reception, Radar overlay, e-mail (Satcom and cellular) plus entertainment DVD's etc. The whole system was powered directly from the boats 12volt supply without the need for invertors and there associated power loss.
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The "Undermounted Yeoman Plotter" John Hatfield Installing the undermounted version of the Yeoman Nav Pro to the chart table on his Nicolson 43.
In July 2004 Sailing Today reviewed the new Compact Yeoman Plotter. Recently they spent a day with John Hatfield reporting on the installation of the under chart table version, on John's classic Nicholson 43 called Dark Horse. | |
| The finished product "The advantages are, a) the unit isn't lying around on the chart table; b) my chart table gets used as an extension to the galley when in harbour or at anchor and it isn't good practice to plonk things, especially metal objects like saucepans and fry-pans down on top of it; c) it won't get damaged by weather or inadvertent spillages; d) it can't be nicked - and so on," says Garth Cooper, owner of a Yeoman Compact and Journalist for Sailing Today. |
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