CAPTAIN FANTASTIC
Well-Known Member
I will be considering buying one of these if I knew it will work in the UK; I can not see why not. Please give us a feedback when you install it and test it; I am sure a few others will be interested too.
I will be considering buying one of these if I knew it will work in the UK; I can not see why not. Please give us a feedback when you install it and test it; I am sure a few others will be interested too.
I can not see why not.
Sorry, is it just me but IMHO AIS apart from that shown by larger commercial vessels, is a right PIA in crowded waters. On a busy Summer Saturday in the Solent AIS becomes completely useless, especially the volume of AIS ghosts from those with GPS sets that simply don't know where they are. My personal opinion is that Class B transponders should be switched off in crowded waters unless its foggy e.g. Just light fog lights on a car.
I think this is sensible advice for Solent sailors. I imagine AIS displays become useless when crowded with Class B targets. Presumably your Radar display looks like that too? I haven't sailed in the Solent with an AIS receiver but in the Irish Sea we get excited when anything pops up on the AIS display and even around the busier shipping areas we only have a handful of targets.Totally with you on this. You have touched on my favourite hobby-horse. In fog, at night or crossing a shipping lane, otherwise OFF
With that in mind I have just bought, but not yet fitted on board, a Taiwan manufactured AIS transponder...
8 DECLARATION OF CONFORMITY
Hereby, Alltek Marine Electronics Corp. (AMEC) declares that this CAMINO-101 is in
compliance with the essential requirements and other relevant provisions of Directive
1999/5/EC.
But the AMEC was an "unknown" Taiwanese one before Milltech Marine started supplying itBut the device is £100 more than the unknown Chinese one.
I hate to disagree with "Angus" but it is likely that such a bit of kit will eventually be badge engineered into another product, and CE approvals applied for. OEMs rarely do this themselves, for economic reasons. There are a bunch of approvals on the details page of the unit, but haven't checked them.... compliant with EU directives to allow it to be put on the market and used within the EU...
I think this is sensible advice for Solent sailors. I imagine AIS displays become useless when crowded with Class B targets. Presumably your Radar display looks like that too? I haven't sailed in the Solent with an AIS receiver but in the Irish Sea we get excited when anything pops up on the AIS display and even around the busier shipping areas we only have a handful of targets.
I hate to disagree with "Angus" but it is likely that such a bit of kit will eventually be badge engineered into another product, and CE approvals applied for. OEMs rarely do this themselves, for economic reasons. There are a bunch of approvals on the details page of the unit, but haven't checked them.
CE means Chinese Export doesnt it?![]()
Chinese manufacturers were submitting well-engineered electrical products to obtain conformity testing reports, but then removing non-essential components in production to reduce costs". A test of 27 electrical chargers found that all the eight legitimately branded with a reputable name met safety standards, but none of those unbranded or with minor names did, despite bearing the CЄ mark; non-compliant devices were actually potentially unreliable and dangerous, presenting electrical and fire hazards.
Whilst we are at it, why not buy a nice cheap VHF... http://www.amazon.co.uk/Two-Way-Pro...8&qid=1388583273&sr=8-7-spell&keywords=bofeng
Easily usable on the marine channels, but as the Chinese AIS, totally illegal, unproved and potentially dangerous.
That doesn't really mean anything though, does it? The CE marking and type approval regime that the EU and British Standards before that have built up over many decades experience is pretty good;