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Bless the Google (and the whole ever-improving info Web)!  Minutes after I stumbled on this intriguing SailorPC tucked away on Avia Sail's purchase page, I'd found the manufacturer's product site with the high res promo photo above and downloadable brochure and manual, as well as pr about the "Engineers' Choice Award" it recently won and even what appears to a U.S. semi-wholesale distributor.  This thing is very interesting, about as close to a modern multi-function navigation display as I've seen a PC get...

Mind you, we're talking about a device which lacks real marine electronics credentials, let alone  sonar or radar options (yet), or a network of dealer/installers.  Beyond Avia, that is, but that company is tiny, and owner Grahame Shannon was frank about the fact that he hasn't actually seen a SailorPC yet.  But the brochure (or datasheet as IEI puts it, excerpt below) and manual are impressively complete and readable, and I like what I see.  Like IP67 waterproof front and back; 1,000 nit touchscreen 12" display (on the SR model); choice of CF card or hard drive storage, and CE 6.0, XP embedded, or Linux operating systems; and even a CANbus input (though I'm sure it would take some work to make that even NMEA 2000 "compatible").  I won't go into the rest of the specs because they're all available at IEI.
   Come to think of it, there was a pretty nice touchscreen PC/MFD hybrid -- Maptech's i3/SRN series -- but it's gone, and I haven't heard much about its successor, the Faria Maestro, though I understand that it really is on the market (finally).  But maybe SailorPC is the right hardware at the right time?  Maybe combined with crack nav software, a NMEA 2000 network, and hopefully some good sonar and radar options, this could be an PC/MFD hybrid that has legs?

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Written by: Ben Ellison
Ben Ellison is electronics editor for Bonnier Marine Group, specifically Yachting and Cruising World. He previously was electronics editor for Power & Motoryacht and SAIL, as well as a writer for Ocean Navigator. His blog posts appear courtesy of his website www.Panbo.com, which has 80,000 monthly readers worldwide.