Allan
Well-Known Member
I am going to fit an AIS receiver and need a VHF feed. Do splitters work and can anyone suggest a good one?
Many thanks.
Allan
Many thanks.
Allan
I would recommend a separate antenna and feed. A new antenna is not that expensive after all. Your VHF is really a piece of life-saving equipment so (for me at least) a splitter is a bad idea.
also the AIS aerial is 'tuned' differently to a 'standard; VHF aerial so I am led to believe.
Not so, AIS uses frequencies in the marine VHF range, so a standard VHF antenna will work fine. However, a splitter isn't necessarily a good idea; maintaining the integrity of the VHF radio system is important.
I have an Advansea AIS RX-100 which is dual channel. It also has a USB output for use down below.I have a Glomex RA201 AIS splitter and it does a great job of driving my ICOM VHF, DigiYacht AIS Receiver and stereo. I've not seen any issues with it and AIS performance seems excellent, VHF performance also.
It's available for about £65 online, but be careful not to accidentally buy the cheaper non AIS version (which just splits out for the VHF and stereo).
If you do get a problem with the VHF, the splitter goes into a bypass mode when power is removed from it, and in the worst case you can always just disconnect it and plug the antenna in directly to the VHF.
That said, if you can do it, the extra antenna option *is* superior.
Which AIS receiver are you getting? Some of the cheaper ones aren't dual channel, they just switch between channels every X seconds. But the Digital Yacht ones are brilliant - mine is the AIS 100 which I picked up for about £120.
I have a Glomex RA201 AIS splitter and it does a great job of driving my ICOM VHF, DigiYacht AIS Receiver and stereo. I've not seen any issues with it and AIS performance seems excellent, VHF performance also.
It's available for about £65 online, but be careful not to accidentally buy the cheaper non AIS version (which just splits out for the VHF and stereo).
If you do get a problem with the VHF, the splitter goes into a bypass mode when power is removed from it, and in the worst case you can always just disconnect it and plug the antenna in directly to the VHF.
That said, if you can do it, the extra antenna option *is* superior.
Which AIS receiver are you getting? Some of the cheaper ones aren't dual channel, they just switch between channels every X seconds. But the Digital Yacht ones are brilliant - mine is the AIS 100 which I picked up for about £120.