elton
Well-Known Member
Yes, it does. That was why I had to pay £36 to change the MMSI number on the Standard Horizon.
The MMSI number belongs to the boat, not the owner.
Yes, it does. That was why I had to pay £36 to change the MMSI number on the Standard Horizon.
Why would anyone need to change the MMSI unless it's a stolen radio
Doesn't the MMSI number change when you re-register the boat on change of ownership?
The MMSI number belongs to the boat, not the owner.
Not very common, I'd have thought. Certainly not common enough to justify circulation of instruction on how to circumvent a locked number. They're locked to limit the saleability of stolen radios, which is a great feature IMO.Or a second hand radio? Or a radio moved from one boat to another?
Can't remember exactly, but perhaps it was because I am Part 1 registered. I would have to look up the communications, but I received a new MMSI number and had to pay to have the radio reset with that number. If I hadn't received a new MMSI number I would not have changed it.
Not very common, I'd have thought. Certainly not common enough to justify circulation of instruction on how to circumvent a locked number. They're locked to limit the saleability of stolen radios, which is a great feature IMO.
It's a problem that need not exist. Let them pay the dealer to do the job, or figure it out for themselves. I just can't see the point in helping people I'm never going to meet, and have never helped me or anyone else I know, to circumvent a legitimate deterrent to thievery. It crosses my mind that some provide the info because it makes them feel clever, and for no other reason.Is that a major problem, or at least one bad enough to distort the second hand market? As many people upgrade from VHS+DSC to DSC+DSC+AIS I would expect there to a be significant number of used sets for sale.
Doesn't the MMSI number change when you re-register the boat on change of ownership?
Can't remember exactly, but perhaps it was because I am Part 1 registered. I would have to look up the communications, but I received a new MMSI number and had to pay to have the radio reset with that number. If I hadn't received a new MMSI number I would not have changed it.
They're locked to limit the saleability of stolen radios, which is a great feature IMO.
Yes, it does. That was why I had to pay £36 to change the MMSI number on the Standard Horizon.
Not very common, I'd have thought. Certainly not common enough to justify circulation of instruction on how to circumvent a locked number. They're locked to limit the saleability of stolen radios, which is a great feature IMO.
It's a problem that need not exist. Let them pay the dealer to do the job, or figure it out for themselves. I just can't see the point in helping people I'm never going to meet, and have never helped me or anyone else I know, to circumvent a legitimate deterrent to thievery. It crosses my mind that some provide the info because it makes them feel clever, and for no other reason.
Why would anyone need to change the MMSI unless it's a stolen radio