AIS Receiver

I'm rather surprised to see that it's supplied with a serial port and cable rather than a USB interface. Trying to find a serial port these days is like looking for the proverbial needle. I'd be inclined to look for something with USB.

Richard
 
Has anyone had any experience with NASA's small AIS receiver?

http://www.cactusnav.com/nasa-engine-receiver-p-784.html

I've had one for years now, works fine. It's only single channel so it flips between the 2 ais channels - sometimes it can take a while for static class b data like boat name to show up but in the real world that's never been a problem. Serial/usb converters cost sod all on ebay to get the data into a laptop or raspberry pi.
 
At 30-odd quid more for the dual channel, USB version of the digital yacht AIS100 I wouldn't bother with the NASA. I've had the USB and non-USB versions of the DY box and both have been excellent with only a rail-mounted aerial.
Didn't have that option way back then, but that does seem like a better choice for not much more cash unless there's a nasa on ebay for next to nothing.
I'd be temped for the serial version in case you want to use a NMEA multiplexer at some point, get your own serial/usb adaptor.
 
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Didn't have that option way back then, but that does seem like a better choice for not much more cash unless there's a nasa on ebay for next to nothing.
I'd be temped for the serial version in case you want to use a NMEA multiplexer at some point, get your own serial/usb adaptor.

What has the serial/USB option got to do with the NMEA output? :confused:

As I said, forget serial .... it's dead and buried. ;)

Richard
 
What has the serial/USB option got to do with the NMEA output? :confused:

As I said, forget serial .... it's dead and buried. ;)

Richard

If you want to use a NMEA multiplexer like Actisense NDC-4 then it will want serial NMEA 0183 data, decide later you want something like that and you're stuffed if you only have ais coming out on a USB feed and can't split off a NMEA 0183 serial feed. Serial on boats is very far from dead and buried, nmea 0183 still lives despite it's limitations. Tigger doesn't actually say what he wants to do with the data , he might want it to go straight into a plotter via nmea 0183, then your dead serial isn't so dead any more.
 
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If you want to use a NMEA multiplexer like Actisense NDC-4 then it will want serial NMEA 0183 data, decide later you want something like that and you're stuffed if you only have ais coming out on a USB feed and can't split off a NMEA 0183 serial feed. Serial on boats is very far from dead and buried, nmea 0183 still lives despite it's limitations. Tigger doesn't actually say what he wants to do with the data , he might want it to go straight into a plotter via nmea 0183, then your dead serial isn't so dead any more.

I've no idea what you're on about GHA.

It sounds as if you're telling me that NMEA and USB are actually serial protocols. I always wondered what the S stood for. ;)

So let's use the term "RS-232 / DE-9 interface" from now on .... and that is truly on life support if not already passed away. RIP. :ambivalence:

Richard
 
....Tigger doesn't actually say what he wants to do with the data , he might want it to go straight into a plotter via nmea 0183, then your dead serial isn't so dead any more.

yep, my fault. Sorry. I want it "simply" to connect to a chartplotter (Garmin 450). So, serial, NMEA0183 seems like the right way to go.
 
I had a NASA AIS receiver connected to my Garmin 451 chartplotter.

It worked faultlessly and showed up all the right information on the plotter screen.
Connection was easy. Not sure what all the fuss above reagrdling connections and brand snobbery is all about.

I only removed my NASA receiver when I upgraded to a transponder, which has a receiver integrated within it.
So my NASA receiver is now up for sale, make me a reasonable offer by PM and it's yours.
 
I'm rather surprised to see that it's supplied with a serial port and cable rather than a USB interface. Trying to find a serial port these days is like looking for the proverbial needle. I'd be inclined to look for something with USB.

Richard

I'm not surprised at the lack of USB, it looks like really old stock - the product review was written 2006, and the supplied software supports Win98 to Vista so probably won't work on most modern PCs. (the AIS data will be fine, but the CD will be a coaster)
 
It sounds as if you're telling me that NMEA and USB are actually serial protocols.

USB is serial in the sense that the bits come one after the other, but it's not RS232 or one of the other related serial protocols.

NMEA0183, however, absolutely is serial in the traditional sense, and is alive and well at sea. The commercial world has yet to be convinced by NMEA2000 and is sticking with point-to-point serial links.

Pete
 
I had a NASA AIS receiver connected to my Garmin 451 chartplotter.

It worked faultlessly and showed up all the right information on the plotter screen.
Connection was easy. Not sure what all the fuss above reagrdling connections and brand snobbery is all about.

I only removed my NASA receiver when I upgraded to a transponder, which has a receiver integrated within it.
So my NASA receiver is now up for sale, make me a reasonable offer by PM and it's yours.

Nothing to do with brand snobbery, the NASA unit is cheap for a reason, it's inferior.

It is a single channel receiver so it alternates between the two channels (a and b). In busy areas it's likely to miss data. For little more money a quality dual channel unit can be purchased that will likely also have USB or wifi connectivity.
 
Installed a QK-A026 Wireless AIS+GPS Receiver a few weeks ago. Sends via wifi to iPad. £100 delivered plus cost of ais aerial and external gps. Have used with iSailor charts, beta version of Memory map with ais and also works with Digital ais app which is free. Worked well on two week trip to Skye to Stornoway, but not happy with iSailor charts except for their ais function, and beta version of Memory Map needs improvement for its ais functions. Will be trying with Navionics and possibly opencpn in future.
If you have a tablet, the Quark stuff is well worth looking at.

http://quark-elec.com/home/aboutus

Only a customer etc.
 
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