ffiill
Well-Known Member
If you live and sail in busy coastal waters I can see the use of a live AIS receiver.
However if like me most of your sailing is done in waters sparsly populated by boats is there any point?
My internet based Boat Beacon happily works on my smart phone with minimal speed data down loads from mobile transmitters.
Not that its much needed in the Inner Sound north of the Kyle of Lochalsh.
Today I counted six targets of which three were a bouy,Rhona lighthouse and the shore based Royal Naval sub station north of Plockton.
One ship at sea,the Raasay ferry and a dive boat anchored near the Kyle.
Given that all of the busy coastal waters are well served by mobile reception is there any need at all for live ship to ship AIS for leisure craft?
Server failure; mobile transmitter failure?-I would guess far less likely than ship transponder failure; onboard computer failure??
However if like me most of your sailing is done in waters sparsly populated by boats is there any point?
My internet based Boat Beacon happily works on my smart phone with minimal speed data down loads from mobile transmitters.
Not that its much needed in the Inner Sound north of the Kyle of Lochalsh.
Today I counted six targets of which three were a bouy,Rhona lighthouse and the shore based Royal Naval sub station north of Plockton.
One ship at sea,the Raasay ferry and a dive boat anchored near the Kyle.
Given that all of the busy coastal waters are well served by mobile reception is there any need at all for live ship to ship AIS for leisure craft?
Server failure; mobile transmitter failure?-I would guess far less likely than ship transponder failure; onboard computer failure??