sailorman
Well-Known Member
And that`s about itAIS is quite useful to identify the ships name of vessels heading towards you if you need to call them up.
https://www.marinetraffic.com/en/
And that`s about itAIS is quite useful to identify the ships name of vessels heading towards you if you need to call them up.
+1
The CPA alarm function would be really useful but for the yachts that transmit.
Still, the clusters of them give a distance and bearing to the nearest marinas.
my open cpn system differentiates anchored from moving. no cpa from mooredCPA drove me to distraction , passing stationary yachts, probably unoccupied, in harbours, with no other traffic around to be concerned about. That said, commercial traffic often continue to transmit even while loading or tied up waiting for orders...
It is certainly a problem on the Orwell, where I am currently berthed three or four boats seem to have their AIS on permanently
Just out of interest, why would that cause you a problem? I know it's a funny thing for people to leave switched on, but surely you'll not be using AIS to avoid other boats in a marina?
mine are 'off when we are home but powering on the instruments has the alarms set to go again as the default on powering on, garmin logic apparently, not mine.I only turn my alarms on when I'm having a snooze![]()
almost non-stop collision warning alarms that you can only silence for a shortwhile before they come back. when I first turn on my instruments breaker the AIS alarms start going befor I have even got the cover off the cockpit display and can silence them by turning them off. leaving the alarms turned off doesn't work as the thing resets to default 'on' on power off.
I understand too that with my Garmin transponder and probably others are similar, the transmitter bit is running as soon as it is powered up and it gets it's power from the NMEa backbone cabling ergo it will transmit even with the AIS receiver/ plotter display turned off. Another bit of daft logic from a software design man who is not a user of the product and hasn't checked consequences in practical terms.