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Apart from 3 hr watches, intense lookout every 15 minutes, radar on
standby we use AIS. For no more than 200 euro's I bought an AIS-receiver, a dedicated vhf-antenna and I plugged it in a serial port on my 1 amp computer. Now the lcd-screen in my cockpit displays the position and course (and more) of all broadcasting commercial vessels over 300 tonnes in the cockpit. I'm not saying it's all you need and when used improperly it's even unsafe I guess but I am very glad to have it. Of every transmitting vessel in a range of 30 miles I see position, course, speed, name and MMSI-number so I won't have to call for "the freighter on my starboard about two mile distance" but I use the right name or even dsc to the right number. I will keep looking out for fishermen, other yachts etc though... When you want to see it work: www.aislive.com Go to the public site, register for free and see the situation one hour old. Len S/v Present On 17 Oct 2005 11:57:15 -0700, "~^ beancounter ~^" wrote: What are some opinions and methods sailors are utilizing these days, in open ocean/offshore anti collision measures? Are folks/sailors using good radar systems with alarms (if so what brands) or just post and conduct regular watches, utilize radar reflectors, etc? ... Ween i say "open ocean/off shore" i mean crossing oceans, 20-30 days of straight sailing, etc... thanx... |