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VHF with DSC & AIS output?

M

Matti Raustia

Jan 1, 1970
0
Wondering if my old Sailor RT2048 should be replaced by VHF with DSC
capabilities. AIS output as NMEA sentences from the VHF would be quite nice
option so I wouldn't need to install new antenna, buy AIS receiver etc to
get AIS info in excellent SeaClear charting program. Is there one available?

matti
 
L

Larry

Jan 1, 1970
0
[email protected] (Matti Raustia) wrote in
Wondering if my old Sailor RT2048 should be replaced by VHF with DSC
capabilities. AIS output as NMEA sentences from the VHF would be quite
nice option so I wouldn't need to install new antenna, buy AIS
receiver etc to get AIS info in excellent SeaClear charting program.
Is there one available?

matti

AIS is a TIME SYNCHRONIZED slot data mode, similar to TDMA cellular phone
technology, not a bunch of serial data sent at random like NMEA uses. It
requires the attention of the AIS receivers and synchronizing modems at all
times with no time for scanning other channels, as you infer. The NMEA
sentences any AIS receiver generate are not what is transmitted on the air,
no relation at all. The receiver decodes the AIS data stream, time
synchronized from all users, and a separate circuit generates the NMEA
serial data stream with its headers for NMEA devices to use.

It's not going to come out of your VHF radio. Put that out of your mind.
I suspect and hope all boats over 30' carry transponders in the near
future, with NMEA chart plotter output if we have to stick to such archaic
technology.
 
M

Matti Raustia

Jan 1, 1970
0
AIS is a TIME SYNCHRONIZED slot data mode, similar to TDMA cellular phone
technology, not a bunch of serial data sent at random like NMEA uses. It
requires the attention of the AIS receivers and synchronizing modems at all
times with no time for scanning other channels, as you infer. The NMEA
sentences any AIS receiver generate are not what is transmitted on the air,
no relation at all. The receiver decodes the AIS data stream, time
synchronized from all users, and a separate circuit generates the NMEA
serial data stream with its headers for NMEA devices to use.

It's not going to come out of your VHF radio. Put that out of your mind.
I suspect and hope all boats over 30' carry transponders in the near
future, with NMEA chart plotter output if we have to stick to such archaic
technology.

I see no reason why we can't have a VHF set with integrated AIS receiver and
your message does not tell any reason for that either. Obviously the set
should have dual receiver circuits, the other for AIS data channel and the
other for normal traffic.

matti
 
L

Larry

Jan 1, 1970
0
[email protected] (Matti Raustia) wrote in
I see no reason why we can't have a VHF set with integrated AIS
receiver and your message does not tell any reason for that either.
Obviously the set should have dual receiver circuits, the other for
AIS data channel and the other for normal traffic.

matti

Because the receiver cannot be in two places at once, you chatting away on
Ch 68 and monitoring the shipping on AIS simultaneously. You'd need a
radio with two transmitters (one a transponder) and two receivers. Two
separate units is better. If one craps out or its technology gets old, you
don't need to scrap the other.

It's why we have component stereos. When the CD player dies, we keep the
receiver/amp.
 
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