Electronic Charts & Chart Plotters

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"Electronic charts are not legal replacements for paper charts, and you must always have current and updated official paper charts on board and consult them frequently"

The Two Types of Electronic Charts - "Raster" and "Vector"

RASTER CHARTS

Raster Charts are basically Electronic Photographs of the original official paper charts which are stored in a computer readable form. The image is built up of a large grid of tiny coloured dots (pixels), normally at resolutions of 100 by 100 dots per inch (or more). This is the fastest, easiest and least expensive way to create electronic charts and they are created by simply scanning the paper chart. Various reference information is then added so that latitude and longitude positions can be calculated. The resulting raster charts can then be reproduced on a computer screen with the appropriate navigation software. Because raster charts are basically a photograph of the paper chart all the information is shown on the computer screen exactly as it is on the paper, i.e. all the symbology is the same, the text is the same, the white border of the chart is present, etc.. This can be an advantage (the electronic chart is immediately familiar and understandable to the user) or a disadvantage (the chart can not be easily manipulated) depending on the users requirements and needs. Zooming and panning is also generally limited with a Raster Chart since when zooming in for greater detail, the photographic image is simply magnified and no more detail can or will appear.

The advantages of raster charts are as follows:-

The disadvantages are as follows:-

Raster Chart Producers and available systems

VECTOR CHARTS

Vector charts are created by scanning the paper charts to create raster files (as above) and then vectorising the data. Vectorisation converts the lines on the paper charts into coordinates that are then stored. These coordinates are then used by the Navigation systems to re-create the lines of the chart on the screen. These lines that are vectorised from the chart are stored in groups (layers) according to the type of line being vectorised. For example all the coastline is stored in one layer the drying line would be stored in another layer etc. Once stored the layers of coordinates can be compressed so that the resultant vector chart is stored very efficiently. A Vector chart can take less than 1/10th of the space of a Raster Chart to store the same amount of information

The advantages of vector charts are as follows:-

The major hydrographic offices of the world, including the largest map maker in the world, the U.S. Defense Mapping Agency (DMA), have already announced that their electronic charts will be in vector format. The advantages and benefits of using vector charts are almost limitless and we can expect to see map makers of all types moving to the vector electronic chart in the years ahead. The world's most advanced hydrographic institutes will use seamless vector chart technology when they build electronic charts in the future and the International Hydrographic Office standards are for seamless vector cartography.

Vector Electronic Chart Producers

The main producers of Vectorised Electronic Charts that cover most of the world are as follows:-

Vector Chart Producers and available systems

Glossary

ECDIS Electronic Chart Display and Information System
IMO International Maritime Organization
IHO International Hydrographic Organisation
ENC Electronic Navigational Chart
SENC System Electronic Navigational Chart
S57 IHO Transfer Standard for Digital Hydrographic Data
S52 Specifications for Chart Content and Display of ECDIS
DX90 Data coding description
   
   

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© 1997-2007 FUTURE DATA INTERNATIONAL Ltd.

Originally created in 1997 and has been a leading source of Electronic Chart information ever since.