AIS Receiver in Long Island Sound NY
dansk wrote in news:1183730944.119497.309510
@g4g2000hsf.googlegroups.com:
I have installed an AIS receiver in our vessel with which we travel
Long Island sound NY. So far I have never seen an AIS contact, I am
beginning to wonder if the unit even works. It is a millitech SR161.
Has anyone seen a contact in this area?
Bob
Make SURE its NOT connected to the same antenna as a VHF transmitter! I
keep finding little AIS receivers T'd into the coax with a 25W
transmitter, the AIS receivers burned all to hell!
To check out your AIS VHF antenna, unplug the AIS receiver from it and
plug in a VHF marine transceiver or walkie-talkie. Make a radio check
call and see if anyone can hear you. Check the SWR if you have a meter.
AIS uses the same band/antenna. If the antenna won't work for your VHF
radio, it won't receive AIS signals, either.
Now....How are we receiving the data from the SR161? AIS receivers do
NOT run the same speed as NMEA data networks and cannot be used with them
unless you have a special multiplexer that can convert the data speed.
With so many laptops NOT having an obsolete RS-232 serial port any more,
you need an RS-232C to USB adapter cable AND THE DRIVER TO GO WITH IT so
the computer tricks the AIS software into THINKING it has a COM (serial)
port. The RS-232C MUST BE CONFIGURED FOR 38,600 BAUD, No parity, 8 bits,
1 stop bit. (N-8-1)...
You can use a dumb terminal program like Windows' Hyperterm (Click START
then ACCESSORIES then COMMUNICATIONS then HYPERTERM to wade through
Windows XP to boot it.) Once Hyperterm is up click CALL then CALL again
and just give it any name. When the speed window comes up pick 38,400
baud N-8-1 and the COM port the USB driver is watching.
Sure wish the damned fools who make AIS weren't living in the 1970's and
just put a USB jack on the damned receiver....Sure make life easier for
all.
Larry
--
While in Mexico, I didn't have to press 1 for Spanish.
While in Iran, I didn't have to press 1 for Farsi, either.
It just isn't fair.
|