Bru
Well-Known Member
I'm not rich enough to buy cheap stuff.
That's too deep for me, especially at this time of night
I'm not rich enough to buy cheap stuff.
That's too deep for me, especially at this time of night![]()
Never heard the phrase "buy cheap, buy twice"?
Ah yes, got it now
In the case of NASA I have actually done just that (Depth / Log) and it still worked out cheaper than buying once!!!!
Especially not their single active channel (alternating between both channels) AIS 'engine' when simultaneous dual channel AIS receivers are available for so little more. It can make such a time difference to obtain a ship's name from the 6 minute static data sentence if the active channel is out of synch with the target transponder.That's why I'd never buy Nasa.
Did you include the cost of replacing it? Seriously, these forums are full of stories of people with Nasa wind instruments which shed their windcups as soon as a light breeze gets up. It's always the same - "Nasa were very helpful" and "the new windcups didn't cost much", but nobody mentions the cost/inconvenience of getting to the top of the mast to change the wretched stuff. There's no way I'd go up my mast, so if it happened to me, it'd be a £200 boatyard job. That's why I'd never buy Nasa.
Especially not their single active channel (alternating between both channels) AIS 'engine' when simultaneous dual channel AIS receivers are available for so little more. It can make such a time difference to obtain a ship's name from the 6 minute static data sentence if the active channel is out of synch with the target transponder.
A trivial defect? I was once very happy to have the fast ferry name from the AIS report to call on VHF as it was coming straight at me with a closing speed of 40 knots and only 1nm distant.
I suspect there had been some official objection to the lack of clarity and marketing obfuscation in the advertising because suddenly there appeared an addition:Agree entirely; I wrote in post #14 that a proper dual channel receiver is really needed if you want to get sensible AIS plots. People buy the Nasa engine because it's cheap, and they don't understand it only receives one channel at a time, perhaps because Nasa describe it as a 2 channel receiver.
A trivial defect? I was once very happy to have the fast ferry name from the AIS report to call on VHF as it was coming straight at me with a closing speed of 40 knots and only 1nm distant.
My rather early model DSC radio has no AIS facility. In any case, it may have been advantageous to transmit my request for intention on channel 16 for all to hear and that there was no acknowledgement other than an immediate swerve to starboard of the ship as soon as my call went out. A later call from the main shore radio station asking me if all had been resolved confirmed that impression.If you have a DSC VHF radio which can display the AIS data you can call any target direct without knowing their name using their MMSI number that cones in the first message more often that the message that contains the ships name.
My rather early model DSC radio has no AIS facility. In any case, it may have been advantageous to transmit my request for intention on channel 16 for all to hear and that there was no acknowledgement other than an immediate swerve to starboard of the ship as soon as my call went out. A later call from the main shore radio station asking me if all had been resolved confirmed that impression.