Upgrade Raymarine ST60 to i70

sailman

Super Anarchist
8,372
480
Portsmouth, RI
My ST60 instruments are having issues with reliability.  Specifically Wind and Depth.  Looking at options and price it seems a package of either three i70 displays or one Tri-Data i70 would work. I have a Raymarine below deck AP linked with the NMEA 2000 conversion bus and an E7 chart plotter, AIS through a Simrad VHF connected to the NMEA bus.

What other options are out there with the same connectivity and pricing?  Strictly cruising here so not overly concerned about bells and whistles.

 

ryley

Super Anarchist
5,633
742
Boston, MA
when Glory got hit by lightning a few years ago, we upgraded the ST60s to i70s. As I recall it required adding a box to the transducers to convert to seatalk. I like the displays, they're very clear. It's not straightforward to switch to night vision, but I usually just dim them. We have two displays over the companionway and an ap controller at the helm.

 

sailman

Super Anarchist
8,372
480
Portsmouth, RI
when Glory got hit by lightning a few years ago, we upgraded the ST60s to i70s. As I recall it required adding a box to the transducers to convert to seatalk. I like the displays, they're very clear. It's not straightforward to switch to night vision, but I usually just dim them. We have two displays over the companionway and an ap controller at the helm.
So if my mast head unit and thru-hull transducers are good I don’t have to run new wires?

 

Snowden

Super Anarchist
1,230
699
UK
Cheaper to go i50 / i60 and run the transducer wires directly to the back of the displays per your ST60s, no ITC-5 required.

 

Alex W

Super Anarchist
3,368
331
Seattle, WA
That is true but you give up a lot of flexibility to n what you display. The i70s is very flexible in what it can do, the i50/i60 are generally fixed function. 

You can do one i50 and one i70s if you are happy with the info layout of the i50. 

 

Overbored

Anarchist
711
59
So. Cal
the ITC-5 then puts all the data on n2k for other things, it's quite useful.
I installed the ITC-5 on the analog ST60 stuff when I replaced the failed speed sensor and added the p-70 depth. the ITC-5 works on the Sea talk NG system. good for the last 6 years. Does  sea talk ng and N2K work together?

 

WHK

Super Anarchist
1,685
140
Newport, RI
My ST60 instruments are having issues with reliability.  Specifically Wind and Depth.  Looking at options and price it seems a package of either three i70 displays or one Tri-Data i70 would work. I have a Raymarine below deck AP linked with the NMEA 2000 conversion bus and an E7 chart plotter, AIS through a Simrad VHF connected to the NMEA bus.

What other options are out there with the same connectivity and pricing?  Strictly cruising here so not overly concerned about bells and whistles.
I'm familiar with your installation since my hands have been on most of the wiring  :)

The ITC-5 option mentioned is probably the least expensive and most flexible.  Assuming the problems you are seeing are not the sensors and associated wiring, the ITC-5 will be fine.  If the issue is with the sensor / wiring then you will see similar reliability issues.  With the ITC-5 you will have everything available on the SeatalkNG bus that you already have wired.  SeatalkNG is Raymarine's NMEA 2000 bus with proprietary connectors.  There are adapters available to connect a standard NMEA Micro C & proprietary SeatalkNG connectors making interconnecting both busses easy.

Once you install the ITC-5 and start changing displays, don't feel constrained to use just Raymarine displays.  You can use Garmin, B&G or whatever works on a NMEA 2000 bus.  Since you have a Raymarine pilot, you'll want to keep a Raymarine chart plotter as it has the best ( e.g. most functional) controls since different vendors chart plotters and autopilots do not play well with other vendors.  Unique features such as direct pilot control are lost when mixing vendors. You can still send waypoints and sensor data.

 

sailman

Super Anarchist
8,372
480
Portsmouth, RI
I'm familiar with your installation since my hands have been on most of the wiring  :)

The ITC-5 option mentioned is probably the least expensive and most flexible.  Assuming the problems you are seeing are not the sensors and associated wiring, the ITC-5 will be fine.  If the issue is with the sensor / wiring then you will see similar reliability issues.  With the ITC-5 you will have everything available on the SeatalkNG bus that you already have wired.  SeatalkNG is Raymarine's NMEA 2000 bus with proprietary connectors.  There are adapters available to connect a standard NMEA Micro C & proprietary SeatalkNG connectors making interconnecting both busses easy.

Once you install the ITC-5 and start changing displays, don't feel constrained to use just Raymarine displays.  You can use Garmin, B&G or whatever works on a NMEA 2000 bus.  Since you have a Raymarine pilot, you'll want to keep a Raymarine chart plotter as it has the best ( e.g. most functional) controls since different vendors chart plotters and autopilots do not play well with other vendors.  Unique features such as direct pilot control are lost when mixing vendors. You can still send waypoints and sensor data.
Thanks Bill.  The mast comes down this winter so I can ring out the wires.  The i70 system sounds like it is in my future.

 

WHK

Super Anarchist
1,685
140
Newport, RI
Thanks Bill.  The mast comes down this winter so I can ring out the wires.  The i70 system sounds like it is in my future.
FYI - when I put in my new mast, the only wiring reused was my wind sensor. One month after the install the wind started being intermittent and I ended up replacing the cable to fix the problem. Stupid of me to reuse the cable from the old mast.

If the mast is coming off, do yourself a favor and replace that really old wind sensor cable.  For the price, it isn't worth it to continue to wonder where the intermittent problem is located. When you ring out the old cable it just may read ok and you just didn't see a system intermittent problem.

 

DDW

Super Anarchist
6,951
1,402
In fact, some of the new Raymarine MFDs require an adapter to get to the STng connector as they come with a Micro C!

 


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