Orca and Raymarine Axiom integration, easy route sharing from tablet to chart plotter

Tablet navigation has come an extremely long way in the decade and a half since Ben Ellison started covering it. However, for as far as the apps have come, integrations between navigation apps and chart plotters remain remarkably frustrating. Some in brand solutions, like Active Captain with Garmin equipment and TZ iBoat with Furuno plotters, work quite well. However, cross platform options typically involve clunky, multi-step export and import routines. Often, these routines require ejecting and inserting physical memory cards, a task made more complex as memory card slots move to the back of slick, all glass chart plotters. Raymarine and Orca have broken with recent trends and offer a wireless integration that allows for remarkably simple sharing of routes between a tablet running Orca and a Raymarine Axiom chartplotter.

Orca offers boaters the ability to navigate using a flexible combination of their app, tablet, and sensor core. Their app can run on your own tablet or theirs and allows users to either leverage the internal GNSS receiver in the tablet or connect to Orca’s Core 2. With the Core 2, Orca is also compatible with Raymarine and Navico radars and Garmin, Navico, and Raymarine autopilots.


I spent a recent afternoon with an Axiom and both Orca’s own tablet (the Orca Display 2) and an iPad. The integration proved easy to establish and then quick and reliable to use. Once connected, sending a route is as simple as finding the route in Orca’s list of saved routes and selecting send to Axiom. Currently, Raymarine’s LightHouse Charts don’t support automatic routing. So, this integration offers a way for boaters to send (hopefully carefully reviewed) automatic routes to their Axioms.




I tested establishing the integration between Orca and Axiom on both. On the iPad, creating the link was super easy because the app was able to use the QR code displayed by the Axiom to facilitate the connection. Unfortunately, the Orca tablet doesn’t have a camera built in, so you must manually type the Axiom’s SSID and passprhase. While certainly not the end of the world, the time saved by quickly just scanning the QR code is nice. I can’t imagine Orca envisioned this use case when they decided not to include a camera in the Display 2.


As I noted in the video, the integration limits route sharing to a single Orca route on the Axiom. Raymarine tags the route as an Orca Route and seems to handle storage a little bit differently. Each waypoint’s name indicates its Orca sourcing. Orca’s routes tend to have a lot of waypoints and I think that part of the reason for only storing one Orca route at a time might be to avoid proliferating thousands of waypoints from the automatically calculated routes. As you can see in the screenshot above, waypoints seem to be anywhere between about 50 and 800 feet apart. So, storage of more than one route could quickly make for a mess.

Logbook improvements


With an Orca Core installed on the boat, logging trips and collecting stats about them should be relatively straightforward. Early on in Orca’s development, the logging functionality proved less than reliable. I found I wasn’t alone often watching the synchronization progress bar never make progress. Fortunately, logging functionality has been revamped and reimplemented as Logbook.

I just returned from a week on a sailing cat in Croatia’s Dalmatian coast and I’m pleased to report that Orca tracked the entire trip flawlessly. Even better, those tracks were quickly synced with Orca’s cloud servers and the logs are now available in the app. On arrival, I connected the Core to the boat’s NMEA 2000 network and to the Starlink Mini I brought along. Throughout the trip, logbook entries were created for each day and synced seamlessly.




Logbook entries support GPX export for use in other navigation apps and uploading to a chart plotter. Additionally, clicking on the data boxes in the Trip summary brings up timeline plots of the indvidual data including speed over ground, speed through water, wind, and fuel consumption.

Final thoughts

The integration between Orca and Raymarine is an exciting step forward. Easing route sharing between tablet apps and installed equipment addresses a pain point I hear about regularly from boaters frustrated by either plotting routes multiple times or following length export and import routines. I am hopeful that the integration won’t end at Raymarine and Orca. I would love to see other apps developers and installed electronic equipment manufacturers embrace interoperability. However, I’m aware that, especially on the installed equipment side, that might not be terribly likely. In recent years Raymarine has embraced interoperability more than any other manufacturer. So, for now I’ll hope their collaborative approach is rewarded and other companies are compelled to follow their lead.



Ben Stein

Ben Stein

Publisher of Panbo.com, passionate marine electronics enthusiast, 100-ton USCG master.

7 Responses

  1. Cam Stevens says:

    Hey Ben. that’s neat to see! I have not tried Orca. Will download and have a look. I do have a question. With so many waypoints created, when you want to delete the route, will it delete all the waypoints at the same time (on the Axiom)?

  2. Mic Fite Mic Fite says:

    This is a very positive development. Thx for giving it some visibility.
    Just a comment regarding following a route on my Raymarine Axiom Pro MFD; when having the autopilot follow a route I think I have to manually accept the arrival and turn to new heading at every waypoint. If I had to do this every 50 -800ft. for an Orca created route that would be a big distraction and PITA.

    • Harry Keith Harry Keith says:

      Exactly my immediate thought! Even if manually steering, if the “course to steer” changes every 1-2 minutes, that’s a pain. This hyper-detailed auto-routing is a common problem.

      I’m not sure about Orca, but another common problem in apps is using True instead of Magnetic. Navionics, C-Map, and Argo are three apps that I have that only provide True course to steer — and I have zero devices on my boat that provide True heading (my autopilot, binnacle compass, GPS/Heading sensor, and binocular/compass all provide Magnetic information). I can’t understand why this basic functionality is routinely omitted — calculating variation for a given location is a simple plug in. Asking the boater to do this is extremely difficult, since the “easiest” way to find variation at a location is to look at a paper chart! Physical chart plotters all can be set to provide data in Magnetic.

    • James McGowan says:

      Starting with LightHouse 4.4, Raymarine introduced a new “Automatic Turning” feature for Axiom chartplotters paired with Evolution autopilots. When enabled, this feature allows the autopilot to seamlessly transition from one waypoint to the next in a route—no manual confirmation required.

      To use Automatic Turning, make sure:

      Your Axiom is running LightHouse 4.4 or later
      You have a Raymarine Evolution-series autopilot
      The autopilot is configured with a powerboat profile
      ⚠️ Note: Automatic Turning is currently not compatible with sailing profiles.

      This enhancement makes route-following more hands-free and intuitive for powerboat users.

      We have a short article describing how it works here: https://www.raymarine.com/en-us/learning/online-guides/automatic-turning-for-route-navigation

      • Harry Keith Harry Keith says:

        I’m a Navy Officer of the Deck. One thing that was all but mandatory, before every single course change the Conning Officer was required (either personally, or by another person) to “clear your wings.” This meant walking to the bridge wing on the side where you were turning, and look fore and aft on that side for traffic/other concerns. While I’m not as disciplined on it on my own boat, it’s still REALLY good practice. Consider a boat passing you 100′ off your starboard side, when the autopilot does a “no confirmation” 30 degree turn to starboard. Ouch!

        • I am totally onboard with you, Harry!

          I am also a former US Navy SWO, Maritime Academy grad, and licensed US Merchant Marine deck officer. You are 110% correct and I could not agree with you more.

          Personally, I would NEVER change course without a thorough and complete look at the traffic situation. Similarly, I would NEVER change lanes on the highway without looking over my shoulder, checking my mirrors, and confirming that the lane-watch radar agrees.

          I’d also NEVER use my autopilot in most of the situations that recreational boats use theirs every day.

          Automatic Turning comes with GREAT responsibility!

  3. I’ve been wanting to try this. I have older E120 displays with same era radar and auto pilot. Any info on if this older raymarine equipment is compatible? Side note on Greece, we just returned from a charter trip, curious what charter company you used. We weren’t to expressed with ours.. Loved the cruising

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