Babylon
Well-Known Member
Can anyone remind me how to calculate a CTS which pre-accounts for the mid-passage alteration to cross a TSS at 90 degrees before altering back again?
Pictures will help.

Pictures will help.
All I would add is that it is best to go right round the TSS if you can.
Work backwards from your destination.
Work out your optimum heading to arrive at the destination from the destination side boundary of the TSS. This will give you a CTS and therefore a target exit point on the destination side boundary of the TSS.
Your CTS in the TSS is defined as 90 degrees to the TSS, so work out where you need to enter to exit at this target.
And now you just have one more CTS to calculate from your origin to the entry point.
A diagram would make this clearer, but hopefully you can make some sense of this.
... calling them up on VHF rarely raises a response unless you use DSC to call their MMSI.
Don't count on it, I had one ship cancel the DSC call twice as well as ignore calls on Ch16.
With respect, why would you want to call up the ship anyway?
Not always - there is little benefit in sailing across the end of the TSS compared to sailing through it - it's all the same ships going in or coming out.
I suppose if you have AIS you can positively identify the ship and make sure you are calling the right one.To find out his intentions. For a start his ARPA is a lot more accurate than anything you are using. Has he noticed you? How is he planning to avoid you - or not? It saves you screwing up his avoidance plans by making unnecessary alterations of course.