Use of AIS in navigation

I just happen to have a DGPS. It came with the boat. Older but was probably quite a fancy one back in the day. When the previous owner installed it.
Differential GPS. My understanding certain light houses are equipped to compare their GPS position with their obviously known fixed position and transmit a Differential correction to GPS to which can be applied by DGPS in their vicinity. DGPS corresponds more closely to the Chart position.
Mine is not hooked up to a plotter. Not even sure if it can be.
My guess would be a light house of this type could send its AIS position quite accurately at the same time. The accuracy would be dependent upon the receiver being DGPS equipped or not.

Wasn't DGPS largely superceded by the WAAS/EGNOS system, which all recent GPS receivers use?
 
I have read several posts from people saying that with AIS and/or radar they feel safe to proceed at full speed in thick fog, which is much the same thing.

In reality, doesn't it really depend upon what full speed is? Slowing down from a top speed of 5 Knots is unlikely to make much difference.
 
Wasn't DGPS largely superceded by the WAAS/EGNOS system, which all recent GPS receivers use?

I don't know, standard GPS may now be just as good. I suspect it is in some places but not in others. the Differential signal doesn't affect the GPS signals accuracy. It compares the GPS signal to the Charted position and provides a "correction" from the GPS to Chart. As far as I know some lighthouses are still equipped to do this.

Just pointing out some lighthouses do transmit GPS signals giving there position very accurately.
 
I don't know, standard GPS may now be just as good.

Differential GPS (DGPS) and the Wide Area Augmentation System (WAAS) do essentially the same thing, but in different ways. DGPS was a way of dealing with the large position errors in the civilian GPS signal which were caused by the Selective Availability (SA) system, under which large regions were given inaccurate GPS positions. DGPS stations knew where they were, and compared that with the position they got from GPS and broadcast the difference. Receovinging these signals, either with an enhanced GPS set or with a separate receiver, allowed the false position to be corrected.

WAAS does the same thing, but looks for much smaller errors in the ranges received from each satellite. These range errors arise from atmospheric conditions and (I think) fluctuations in the earth's magnetic field. WAAS was originally introduced by the FAA to give the added accuracy GPS needed for aviation use, and covers North America. The European Space Agency runs an equivalent, EGNOS (European Geostationary Navigation Overlay System).

Unlike DGPS, WAAS/EGNOS corrections are broadcast by satellite, and most GPS receivers use them as a matter of course. My old GPS72 is enabled for both WAAS and EGNOS.

I think that DGPS is still used in specialist applications where extremely high accuracy (millimetric or less) is needed, like archaeological surveying, but WAAS/EGNOS is good enough for the rest of us, and even that is probably overkill for most marine use now that SA is a distant memory.
 
My guess would be a light house of this type could send its AIS position quite accurately at the same time. The accuracy would be dependent upon the receiver being DGPS equipped or not.

Nope, we've already established above that fixed AtoNs broadcast their official surveyed position, no GPS involved. What they send out will be exactly as accurate as the largest-scale chart.

Pete
 
Nope, we've already established above that fixed AtoNs broadcast their official surveyed position, no GPS involved. What they send out will be exactly as accurate as the largest-scale chart.

I think we've established that that is what they should do, which may not necessarily be what they actually do ...

Things I Do Not Know But It's Late So Can't Be Bothered Looking Up #547: Do lighthouses and other aids to navigation transmit on the Class A scheme, the Class B scheme or a scheme of their own?
 
I think we've established that that is what they should do, which may not necessarily be what they actually do ...

Things I Do Not Know But It's Late So Can't Be Bothered Looking Up #547: Do lighthouses and other aids to navigation transmit on the Class A scheme, the Class B scheme or a scheme of their own?

simples: watch calculated (change in position, not transmitted) CoG. If a lighthouse moves its using GPS, if it dosent move it isnt using GPS.
 
I think we've established that that is what they should do, which may not necessarily be what they actually do ...

Things I Do Not Know But It's Late So Can't Be Bothered Looking Up #547: Do lighthouses and other aids to navigation transmit on the Class A scheme, the Class B scheme or a scheme of their own?

Schemes of their own. Type 4 messages are used for base stations and type 21 for AtoNs. I think a lighthouse is a base station, but if I get a chance and I remember I'll check when next on the boat.
 
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