DRW
Well-Known Member
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I’m looking forward to our new AIS software coming, it turned out to be useful for SAR over the summer, ......
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Could you expand on this DRW? How is AIS so useful to SAR, particularly for recreational boats?
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Without AIS, if we had a search offshore, we would broadcast to all vessels to let them know and wait for the vessels in the area to call us back. Then they would be tasked accordingly. There has always been the suspicion (quite certainly unfounded) that perhaps not all merchant vessels respond every time.
In my part of the Channel, the large merchant ships are usually tasked to make a course alteration and make a specified track through the search area, with a good lookout posted. Once clear of the search area they are then released. Given the number of vessels in the SW bound lane this is quite useful.
Now I can look on AIS, call up the vessels that I want and talk to them directly, well before they get to the search area. I can see their position, course and speed, and negotiate the simplest but most effective track for them to follow through my search area, minimising the inconvenience and cost to them and maximising the probability of detection for me. Now I can see them transit my search area and it can all be plotted and calculated. Wonderful.
How is it useful for recreational boats with regard to SAR? Only as above I guess. I haven’t seen any recreational boats with transducers fitted yet, but I guess it will come in time as the makers get their markets and production sorted out. But who wants every one to know where they are all the time? Perhaps some will?
Hope that answers it….
[ QUOTE ]
I’m looking forward to our new AIS software coming, it turned out to be useful for SAR over the summer, ......
[/ QUOTE ]
Could you expand on this DRW? How is AIS so useful to SAR, particularly for recreational boats?
[/ QUOTE ]
Without AIS, if we had a search offshore, we would broadcast to all vessels to let them know and wait for the vessels in the area to call us back. Then they would be tasked accordingly. There has always been the suspicion (quite certainly unfounded) that perhaps not all merchant vessels respond every time.
In my part of the Channel, the large merchant ships are usually tasked to make a course alteration and make a specified track through the search area, with a good lookout posted. Once clear of the search area they are then released. Given the number of vessels in the SW bound lane this is quite useful.
Now I can look on AIS, call up the vessels that I want and talk to them directly, well before they get to the search area. I can see their position, course and speed, and negotiate the simplest but most effective track for them to follow through my search area, minimising the inconvenience and cost to them and maximising the probability of detection for me. Now I can see them transit my search area and it can all be plotted and calculated. Wonderful.
How is it useful for recreational boats with regard to SAR? Only as above I guess. I haven’t seen any recreational boats with transducers fitted yet, but I guess it will come in time as the makers get their markets and production sorted out. But who wants every one to know where they are all the time? Perhaps some will?
Hope that answers it….