Reads water pressure usually.
Ayuh,...... With air pressure,......
The water rarely gets more than a foot or so up the tube, unless ya unhook the other end,......
'n then it'll pee on yer legs,.....
Ayuh,...... With air pressure,......
The water rarely gets more than a foot or so up the tube, unless ya unhook the other end,......
'n then it'll pee on yer legs,.....
A GPS measures speed over land. In other words, if you are going against a 10 mph current and the boat is doing 10 mph, your GPS will read zero
That is something I have never experienced and there are some serious currents here on the Great Lakes. Why would the satellite tell you aren't moving if the GPS co ordinates are changing?
OK, lets think about the Niagara River for example. The current is linear and predictable. Let's assume the speed is 10 mph under the Peace Bridge. So you set your boat throttle so the boat is actually moving 10 mph. Now head upstream.
Your pitot tube and paddle wheel both show 10 mph. But look at the shore - you are actually standing still.
In this case the GPS coordinates are NOT changing, and thats why the GPS says zero.
GPS shows speed over earth. Pitot shows speed over water.
This may be an ignorant question, but if you are really standing still, why would you want to think you are moving at 10 mph? I would think you want to know haw fast you are actually getting from point A to point B.
A GPS measures speed over land. In other words, if you are going against a 10 mph current and the boat is doing 10 mph, your GPS will read zero.
A quality pitot tube / pressure gauge when new will provide water speed data to within 1 mph. The problem is that the hole in the tube eventually gets plugged, and the hose gets cracked from age, and thus the actual boat speed data deteriorates with age. Its all about maintenance.
When my GPS average data upstream vs. downstream doesn't equal my dashboard pitot data I know that I need to do some cleaning.
Another way to look at this upstream/downstream/speed over land/over water is to anchor your boat in a river that has a known (roughly) current. Let's assume that current is 10 MPH. With a pitot driven speedometer, the speedometer would show 10 MPH because that's the speed water is passing the pitot. You are anchored so the boat is not moving and a GPS unit would show zero MPH because your are -- well -- going zero MPH. OK -- now lets reverse things and let the boat FLOAT downstream. Now the speedometer would show zero MPH because the boat and the current are going the same speed and water is not passing the pitot but rather going "with it". Even though the speedometer shows zero, the boat is actually going 10 MPH. On the otherhand, a GPS unit would now show 10 MPH because the boat is indeed moving across the land (water in this case) so boat position is actually changing.