ParaHandy
Well-Known Member
Overheard this conversation .. “got QM2 MMSI at Nab Tower on ‘er way to New York and guess what? Her call sign is GBQM ….. wow … wot about that, then?”
Erm … this is marine equivalent to trainspotting with spotty youths clutching their radios in anoraks?! No drugs, mind, altho’ do get chance to follow the Donald Redford for high prozac tension (will she, won’t she?) excitement ….
Righto … trundled out into eastern solent with NASA AIS engine for final pre-screw-it-in trial, SeaClear + Glomex whip aerial gaffer taped to pushpit and picked up everything expected to a limit of 8-10m radius except Wightlink ferries which don’t have AIS even though they are passenger vessels and weigh a good deal over 300 tonnes. Red Funnel ferries do have AIS …. Get a grip Wightlink ….
But …
The SeaClear package (which is free) drops an AIS target after 4 minutes and given that the NASA AIS can only receive on one of the two transmission frequencies (ships alternate their AIS transmissions on 2 frequencies and there is normally plenty of opportunity to receive data) there is a good chance that you’ll miss ships at anchor and the static details such as the vessel’s name can also be missed as these are transmitted at 3 and 6 minute intervals respectively. Also, the NASA AIS engine when used to pass-through GPS data frequently fails to pass the GPS data for periods up to 14 seconds. NASA deny their engine gets overloaded but can not see any other reason for this as disconnect the VHF aerial and GPS data flows through uninterrupted. (thanks to All-gadgets for trying to sort this and for supplying the kit) And, I fitted a mast-head steel whip antennae to the pushpit which works better than some …
However …
The SeaClear CPA & TCPA is bluidy good. The NASA AIS engine picks up transmissions eg vessel 23+kn is received nearly every 4 secs (allowing for 50% transmission loss on the other frequency). There is another package from ShipPlotter (25 euros) which keeps a ship database indexed by MMSI numbers and shows vessel name to be displayed as soon as dynamic data is received but this package has no CPA and is more use for shore-based anoraks …
Cost …
Unusually, for something as potentially useful as this, total cost minimal at £150 all including aerial. Charts good enough for use with SeaClear from here and anyone having problems can PM me and I’ll email calibrated south coast charts …
This AIS does seem to give you a level playing field in the wild-west out thar' when avoiding the bastids in fog … it complements radar but will never replace it etc etc + more guff to satisfy luddites out there !!
The chances of the full AIS (transmission & reception) becoming mandatory for vessels under 20mtrs is, I would have thought, nil. The two areas in the world concerned about bandwidth overload are the Malaka Straits and North East/South UK and plans to commercialise the system with email, weather and VTS interrogating ships would scupper any spare bandwidth anyway. All imho.
And thanks to …
Jock McHacker, Scottish/Swedish pioneer of Self Organizing Time Division Multiple Access (SOTDMA) data communication technology for inventing the thing …
Erm … this is marine equivalent to trainspotting with spotty youths clutching their radios in anoraks?! No drugs, mind, altho’ do get chance to follow the Donald Redford for high prozac tension (will she, won’t she?) excitement ….
Righto … trundled out into eastern solent with NASA AIS engine for final pre-screw-it-in trial, SeaClear + Glomex whip aerial gaffer taped to pushpit and picked up everything expected to a limit of 8-10m radius except Wightlink ferries which don’t have AIS even though they are passenger vessels and weigh a good deal over 300 tonnes. Red Funnel ferries do have AIS …. Get a grip Wightlink ….
But …
The SeaClear package (which is free) drops an AIS target after 4 minutes and given that the NASA AIS can only receive on one of the two transmission frequencies (ships alternate their AIS transmissions on 2 frequencies and there is normally plenty of opportunity to receive data) there is a good chance that you’ll miss ships at anchor and the static details such as the vessel’s name can also be missed as these are transmitted at 3 and 6 minute intervals respectively. Also, the NASA AIS engine when used to pass-through GPS data frequently fails to pass the GPS data for periods up to 14 seconds. NASA deny their engine gets overloaded but can not see any other reason for this as disconnect the VHF aerial and GPS data flows through uninterrupted. (thanks to All-gadgets for trying to sort this and for supplying the kit) And, I fitted a mast-head steel whip antennae to the pushpit which works better than some …
However …
The SeaClear CPA & TCPA is bluidy good. The NASA AIS engine picks up transmissions eg vessel 23+kn is received nearly every 4 secs (allowing for 50% transmission loss on the other frequency). There is another package from ShipPlotter (25 euros) which keeps a ship database indexed by MMSI numbers and shows vessel name to be displayed as soon as dynamic data is received but this package has no CPA and is more use for shore-based anoraks …
Cost …
Unusually, for something as potentially useful as this, total cost minimal at £150 all including aerial. Charts good enough for use with SeaClear from here and anyone having problems can PM me and I’ll email calibrated south coast charts …
This AIS does seem to give you a level playing field in the wild-west out thar' when avoiding the bastids in fog … it complements radar but will never replace it etc etc + more guff to satisfy luddites out there !!
The chances of the full AIS (transmission & reception) becoming mandatory for vessels under 20mtrs is, I would have thought, nil. The two areas in the world concerned about bandwidth overload are the Malaka Straits and North East/South UK and plans to commercialise the system with email, weather and VTS interrogating ships would scupper any spare bandwidth anyway. All imho.
And thanks to …
Jock McHacker, Scottish/Swedish pioneer of Self Organizing Time Division Multiple Access (SOTDMA) data communication technology for inventing the thing …