Rivers & creeks
Well-Known Member
On the contrary.
All vessels >300GRT have to have AIS Class A - it is compulsory!!!
All Class A AIS transponder units units have some kind of screen (however small)- again: it's the law.
I agree 100% - they all display it on a three line LCD display showing the numerical lat and long of nearby vessels. Ferries and ships coded since 2004 may well have also integrated it onto new plotters. Ships coded since 2004? - about 5% of the commercial vessels visiting the UK. Then you have to hope they haven't disabled the class B signals as class A sets are allowed to do to reduce clutter on their screens. It's a sterile argument though, we're arguing about different things. The class B transponder makes you feel safer - and that may or may not be a good thing but it's why it's bought - the fact that you appear as a series of digits on a scrolling display is the illusion of safety you've bought. But if it makes someone feel safer then that's no business of anyone else. All I'm doing is illustrating why it doesn't help avoid collisions, but it isn't bought to do that because it can't, it's bought to make someone feel better; hence the discussion never goes anywhere.
A RADAR transponder shows up on every single commercial vessel out there on the screen they are looking at for all their regular navigation, a different beast altogether but much less sexy in marketing terms.