aquaplane
Well-Known Member
If you want to call Clyde or Oban, you'd be better off with a ouija board not a VHF!
I know, but it makes the point that reducing the number of stations does infact reduce the service.
I'm not stupid.
If you want to call Clyde or Oban, you'd be better off with a ouija board not a VHF!
It's a long time since Clyde CG closed, and even longer for Oban.
I know, but the argument for fewer centralised stations was that the less busy operators would be able to cover the busy areas, obviously bollocks and so it has been proved.
I got a smart phone when the Stornoway CC stopped doing the forecast every 3 hours when I was in Tobermory because it was windy and they were working casualties, at exactly the times when they were needed.
Calling Oban then would have been a good option. But it was closed.
A number of countries have a pre-recorded forecast played continuously on a loop. Needs its own dedicated channel but seems to me a wonderful idea.
Personally, I lost all respect for the CG service when they were playing silly buggers, and refusing to broadcast Safety Information Broadcasts. I installed a Navtex.
Yes - and it's not as if there's a shortage of disused "public correspondence" channels that are duplex and hence not much use for many purposes, but ideal for this.
I'm not a radio engineer, but I think you might need more than one in order to alternate them around the coast and prevent interference, but again, there's plenty of room.
Pete
Which is compiled and broadcast by... HM Coastguard!
Yes, but Navtex is unaffected by "incident working". SY CG cover a huge area, using many transmitter aerials, but if some poor soul slips off a path at Tobermory, as often as not they choose not to do the normal MSI broadcast on their 10(?) aerials. I have never experienced a neighbouring station, i.e. Belfast or Shetland, putting out the broadcast on SY's behalf, although that is what we were told would happen when stations were being closed.
Firstly, you might not know - if we broadcast an MSI for Solent, for example, we (Portland) would ID as Solent. The person on the end of the VHF wouldn't know.
..
I think that's the plan behind the recent move to new channels for MSI broadcasts - although in the west country, where Ch10 and 23 have been lost to broadcast, it's already causing problems in some areas.
There's a reason we used to broadcast on 6 channels at Falmouth not just the three that are used now.
I just assume I'm in a dead spot and quite often in west coast anchorages I am................. Or indeed, if there just is no broadcast.
The continuous loop system seems to work alright in that little country over there, called the USA.Somebody mentioned continuous broadcasts. Sounds fine but in practice you would need several dedicated channels. I do not know how many. But guess that would kill the idea for the U.K. unless you were thinking of the Solent and the Clyde only. I do know that around W France we have continuous broadcasts on Ch63 from Ethel and Chassiron. I have rarely heard either. I think they are OK if you sail in fairly lim9ted areas, we are travellers so are often out of range.
Back to one of my hobby horses. We need good reliable wireless internet access around all our coasts. Even my little Huawei dongle works well 4 or 5 miles out. A better device with a reasonably good aerial works about 10-15 or more miles out. Better still would be a satellite system with IMO blessing, recognised as part of the GMDSS and priced accordingly. All terrestrial radio systems have insurmountable problems. We need a 21st century solution, not a mid 20th century one.
Somebody mentioned continuous broadcasts. Sounds fine but in practice you would need several dedicated channels.
Depends whether continuous means 100% or not. 10 mins on, 10 mins off on each particular transmitter would ease many of the issues, 10 on, 20 off would probably solve the vast majority.
I doubt we'll ever get full 3G/4G coverage of the coasts. Increasing regulation and the cost of subsidising smartphones has killed many of the mobile phone companies' revenue streams, with EU roaming being the last nail. There just isn't the money for marginal investments any more.
I did get involved on the periphery of a LEO satellite phone system many years ago (we were looking at billing). Satellite phone systems are a nightmare to set up and the sort of thing you have in mind is very unlikely to happen. The company we were doing work for ended up having to destroy the satellites they'd already launched, which must've cost someone a pretty packet.
With my Huawei 3350 dongle, I could go online with IPad or laptop, up to around 4 or 5 miles out. A friend with a more expensive device, mine was about £40-50 I think, had connection about 13 miles out.
A lot of it depends I believe on how the cell site is set up. I get the impression that the UK operators aren't keen on spending money on expensive kit just to point out over the sea.
The range is of course line of sight. 4G is at radar frequencies after all.
Satellites are OK for downloading, if expensive, but with geo stationary satellites there are of course delays. If you wanted a more interactive browsing set-up it would require LEO satellites and what killed the one I mentioned was dealing with all those countries over which the staellites passed.
The continuous loop system seems to work alright in that little country over there, called the USA.![]()
I know exactly which Stornaway CG you mean, she sounds gorgeous.