PaulGooch
Well-Known Member
I really meant for AIS class B transponders - many ships do not (yet) use AIS in the way us leisure users do - mostly they have perfectly adequate radar and visual means for lookout - therefore Class B transponder should not be relied upon to make you visible to shipping.
Ah right, with you now.
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Colregs rule5 will not be broken - as it has the term 'appropriate' in it - which is open to subjective discussion. I believe if 2 class B boats did collide - the fact that one (or both) were not monitoring AIS class B would be a less significant issue to visual lookout - assuming reasonable vis!
I just wonder if the wording of rule 5 makes the manufacturers wary of programming filters in, that might leave them open to legal action, especially in places like the US.
My thoughts on a selective filtering on Class B would be as such:
Display - user selectable icon to differentiate from Class A and a range & time to range filter so only class vessels B within X minutes of becoming closer than X Nm (could be fraction of) would be displayed.
Alarm - separate alarm triggers for Class A & B having independent settings as stated on those above.
If I had that facility then my display for Class B would be set to 10 minutes @ 1Nm - so any vessel that will be "within 1Nm of me in the next 10 minutes" would be displayed.
For Alarm on Class B - it would be off most of the time - but I would probably want an alarm on 10 minutes on 0.02Nm (<40m) max.
Seems to make sense. An option to completely turn class B reception off would also be useful. In the future, when more and more boats have transponders, busy areas class B icons could easily cause so much clutter that the plotter would be unreadable. We could otherwise end up switching AIS off completely in those areas.
For AIS alarms in general - Standard Horizon have a 'problem' ... if a vessels forecasted track comes within the guard zone it triggers the alarm - which is fine - except you have to acknowledge it - then, if the track goes outside the guard zone (by any amount) the alarm is reset - and once it comes back in again then the alarm sounds once more. - There needs to be a buffer zone so you're not constantly 'alarmed' by vessels that will pass on the fringe of the guard zone. Actually - thinking slightly deeper than that - vessels on the fringe could trigger a double beep that doesn't need acknowledging - whilst those that would enter an inner guard zone get the full warning ...
Damm - I wish I was a programmer!
Yes, my last plotter was Standard Horizon. Great plotters in stand alone mode, but poorly implemented AIS, Radar and compass integration. Even with a fluxgate compass, there is no "Heading up" orientation on the plotter. So, when at anchor or drifting, the plotter doesn't know which way your facing, it assumes you're facing the way you are swinging at anchor, or the way you are drifting. I changed to Raymarine, which implement AIS better and have a "heading up" mode.