The vertical bar contains a lot of information at a glance.
The tidal rise is 2.5m above the chart datum. The blue part is “water”. The “V” inside he bar indicates that the tide is decreasing towards Low Water.
Here, the tide is rising towards High Water.
Low Water looks like this.
High Water Looks like this.
Right click the middle of either icon to see the tidal graph:
If a waypoint, route or a track is, or passes, on top of a tidal icon, a right-click will show a context menu for those features. To see the tidal graph, press “Show Tide Information” at the bottom of the menu.
The Tidal Dialog gives the name of the station as well as the the name of the Data Source file. This is important when you have multiple sources covering the same area. Time and height for HW and LW is displayed in the upper right part.
The Yellow box, with the tidal rise and time, follows the cursor when hovering over the dialog. The time axis at the bottom displays the time, in this case he timezone is “Z +01:00”, which is the same as one hour ahead (east) of UTC, that used to be called GMT.
In North America it is common to use a three or four letter acronym for timezones.
UNITED STATES TIME ZONE CODES | UTC OFFSET | |
AST | ATLANTIC STANDARD TIME | UTC - 4 |
EST | EASTERN STANDARD TIME | UTC - 5 |
EDT | EASTERN DAYLIGHT TIME | UTC - 4 |
CST | CENTRAL STANDARD TIME | UTC - 6 |
CDT | CENTRAL DAYLIGHT TIME | UTC - 5 |
MST | MOUNTAIN STANDARD TIME | UTC - 7 |
MDT | MOUNTAIN DAYLIGHT TIME | UTC - 6 |
PST | PACIFIC STANDARD TIME | UTC - 8 |
PDT | PACIFIC DAYLIGHT TIME | UTC - 7 |
AKST | ALASKA TIME | UTC - 9 |
AKDT | ALASKA DAYLIGHT TIME | UTC - 8 |
HAST | HAWAII-ALEUTIAN STANDARD TIME | UTC - 10 |
HADT | HAWAII-ALEUTIAN DAYLIGHT TIME | UTC - 9 |
SST | SAMOA STANDARD TIME | UTC - 11 |
SDT | SAMOA DAYLIGHT TIME | UTC - 10 |
CHST | CHAMORRO STANDARD TIME | UTC +10 |
Available current stations will show on the chart as orange diamonds, when zooming in arrows will appear pointing in the direction of the set. Note that “current” here is short for “Tidal Current”, and is the same as the UK term “Tidal Stream”.
Master current stations are shown like this
in all scales. No direction is associated with these stations but they can be queried, trough a right click, for the magnitude of the current.
Arrow indicates current direction and strength - the bigger the arrow, the more current.
The size of the arrows can be customized by users in the opencpn.ini (opencpn.conf) file.
In the [Settings/Others] section you can set the option CurrentArrowScale to a positive number representing a percentage scaling factor of the current arrows. The values bellow 100 mean the arrows will be smaller than now, the values above 100 will cause them to be bigger.
A numerical value can be displayed next to the arrow.
To do this go to Options→Ships→AIS Targets and tick the box “Show names with AIS targets at a scale grater than 1:”, and set a scale. When zoomed in to a scale greater than this, the current will also be displayed with a number
Right click the orange box to see current graph:
If a waypoint, route or a track is, or passes, on top of a current icon, a rightclick will show a context menu for those features. To see the current graph, press “Show Current Information” at the bottom of the menu.
The Yellow box, with time,speed and direction, follows the cursor when hovering over the dialog.
Note that OpenCPN can only display “Reversing Currents” found in restricted waterways, such as rivers and straits.
The general case with “Rotary Tidal Currents”, can not be displayed with this interface, but are available for some areas as Grib files. More here Grib Weather Plugin
OpenCPN supports two tidal file formats. Xtides .tcd file format as well as the default .IDX type. The latter consits of a pair of files called HARMONIC and HARMONIC.IDX, in a directory.
The default, IDX dataset for tides and currents is limited, mainly for copyright reasons.
Please note that OpenCPN differs from XTide results, in very small amounts, usually a few minutes, regarding the times of slack water. This is due to the older algorithm used in OpenCPN compared to the most modern XTides implementation of subordinate station time offset calculation
There is currently has a problem when multiple .tcd files are loaded. The reference station may be incorrectly identified. In practical navigation only one .tcd file is needed at any given time, depending on which side of the Atlantic you are navigating.
A number of different datasets are available on the Internet, with vastly greater coverage. Some of these datasets are quite old, and they also contains glitches and errors, many of which have been corrected in the OpenCPN default dataset.
In many areas there are no free alternatives, and OpenCPN makes it possible to switch between data sets and even using them at the same time. If two stations are located on exactly the same position, only one will be visible……
Go to Options→Charts→Tides & Currents. Press “Add Dataset..” to add another dataset.
Tidal files can be located anywhere on your file system, but it will pay off to be organized. The first entry above shows the default location for the built in datafile on Linux. On windows a typical location is “C:\Program Files\OpenCPN\tcdata”.