haydude
Well-Known Member
I purchased the cheapest one, available on ebay UK at £385. There is no point to spend more for either an AIT 250 or a Comar. THEY ARE THE SAME THING although the Comar has a different case. Same electronic board, same firmware, same PC software configuration.
My experience so far has been disappointing.
I interfaced my unit with a Raymarine C80.
Devices: 1 x NMEA GPS (excellent quality), 1 x C80, 1 x Transas AIS transponder, 1 x DSC VHF radio
Mast antenna splitter using EasySplit OCB (no problem, verified no loss of signal and receiving range after install)
Phase 1: Everything integrated through a ShipModul AIS multiplexer. That is because I want position from my NMEA GPS. No way, C80 complains every few minutes of lost fix (never happened before).
Phase 2: remove multiplexer, get NMEA GPS through Raymarine Seatalk NMEA bridge on Seatalk. Did not solve the problem, still loss of fix from C80 every few minutes.
I though it must be because the transponder transmits at higher rate and takes priority.
Phase 3: leave NMEA GPS out and connect only transponder to C80, after all I still get the position. Again loss of fix every few minutes, but only when moving, not when stationary, which makes the issue very hard to debug. Now however I know that when that happens it is because the C80 has actually lost NMEA communications with the transponder, not because the transponder has lost fix. Problem still unresolved.
I ordered a Brookhouse multiplexer that can wipe GPS sentences from the AIS. I hope with that to solve the problem, but I will have to wait two more weeks.
Collateral issues discovered:
1) there is no support whatsoever for these transponders, for any. I tried with PrsComms that is the Transas dealer (do not know what to do) Transas (no answer), AIT (do not exist), and Comar (do not know what to do).
2) the configuration software is poor. There are no updates to date.
3) There is no way to disable the transponder from sending GPS data together with AIS on the NMEA link, so that one could use another, more reliable GPS receiver
4) Given that one is forced to using the transponder position and GPS data it would be nice if that were complete with HDOP and Satellite info. No way to configure the transponder to send that data permanently. There is a way to activate that using a PC, but when the transponder power is cycled, then the configuration is lost.
5) the firmware is pure rubbish with very few configurable options. The analyst who designed it should rather be a gardener with all due respect to the category. There are no firmware updates. If I think at the level of support we get for computer equipment much less expensive than this AIS transponder, and the inexistent support for this disproportionately (for the functions we get) expensive "marine" device, with such a poor quality firmware I only get INCENSED!
Conclusion, if you want to enjoy sailing rather than being annoyed by your plotter beeping all the time, do not buy any of these AIS transponders, or you will end up without the Chartplotter because YOU WILL TURN IT OFF!
My experience so far has been disappointing.
I interfaced my unit with a Raymarine C80.
Devices: 1 x NMEA GPS (excellent quality), 1 x C80, 1 x Transas AIS transponder, 1 x DSC VHF radio
Mast antenna splitter using EasySplit OCB (no problem, verified no loss of signal and receiving range after install)
Phase 1: Everything integrated through a ShipModul AIS multiplexer. That is because I want position from my NMEA GPS. No way, C80 complains every few minutes of lost fix (never happened before).
Phase 2: remove multiplexer, get NMEA GPS through Raymarine Seatalk NMEA bridge on Seatalk. Did not solve the problem, still loss of fix from C80 every few minutes.
I though it must be because the transponder transmits at higher rate and takes priority.
Phase 3: leave NMEA GPS out and connect only transponder to C80, after all I still get the position. Again loss of fix every few minutes, but only when moving, not when stationary, which makes the issue very hard to debug. Now however I know that when that happens it is because the C80 has actually lost NMEA communications with the transponder, not because the transponder has lost fix. Problem still unresolved.
I ordered a Brookhouse multiplexer that can wipe GPS sentences from the AIS. I hope with that to solve the problem, but I will have to wait two more weeks.
Collateral issues discovered:
1) there is no support whatsoever for these transponders, for any. I tried with PrsComms that is the Transas dealer (do not know what to do) Transas (no answer), AIT (do not exist), and Comar (do not know what to do).
2) the configuration software is poor. There are no updates to date.
3) There is no way to disable the transponder from sending GPS data together with AIS on the NMEA link, so that one could use another, more reliable GPS receiver
4) Given that one is forced to using the transponder position and GPS data it would be nice if that were complete with HDOP and Satellite info. No way to configure the transponder to send that data permanently. There is a way to activate that using a PC, but when the transponder power is cycled, then the configuration is lost.
5) the firmware is pure rubbish with very few configurable options. The analyst who designed it should rather be a gardener with all due respect to the category. There are no firmware updates. If I think at the level of support we get for computer equipment much less expensive than this AIS transponder, and the inexistent support for this disproportionately (for the functions we get) expensive "marine" device, with such a poor quality firmware I only get INCENSED!
Conclusion, if you want to enjoy sailing rather than being annoyed by your plotter beeping all the time, do not buy any of these AIS transponders, or you will end up without the Chartplotter because YOU WILL TURN IT OFF!