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"RayD" wrote in :
This looks like a useful accessory, especially on those long offshore night watches. Anyone have any experience using it w/Nobeltec? http://www.milltechmarine.com/SR161.htm We've just upgraded Lionheart's AIS receiving from the self-contained little LCD display with no chart to using the SR161 to The Cap'n, our nav software of choice. As the SR161 only outputs 38,800 baud serial data, incompatible with the NMEA 0183 network's 4800 baud data, you have two choices in how to hook it up to your system. Choice one is to send Meindert a few hundred dollars for his NMEA multiplexer that has a 38,800 baud input. The multiplexer buffers the data and feeds it into the data stream as AIS statements (which, by the way, are NOT NMEA statements) for your various AIS-compatible units to dissolve. This may become a problem in areas of intense shipping where there may be too many ships transmitting high speed data for the measily NMEA 4800 baud data stream to process. Choice two is $8 at Radio Shack! Radio Shack (or any computer store) has a RS-232C serial to USB converter cable whos electronics powers itself from the computer's USB port. The cable comes with a software driver CD that self-installs before connecting the cable. Once installed, each time you plug in the cable, a new COM4 serial port shows up that your nav software can access. So, I have the NMEA network coming in at 4800 baud to COM1, the only 9-pin serial port on the boat's laptop. The SR161's serial output plugs directly into the Radio Shack's $8 Serial-to-USB adapter cable, which its driver fools the computer OS into thinking is another RS-232C serial port running at 38,800 8-N-1 no flow control serial port that intense shipping will not overrun with AIS data. The Captain's latest version 8.3 digests the AIS higher speed data stream and sends it out over the 4800 baud NMEA data network to the other chart plotters....but only those plotters who have firmware upgrades that include support for AIS data plotting....the new ones. We only need it on the main computer at the nav station easily seen from the helm. Sorry I don't know if Nobeltec's software handles it like this, but I suspect it would. The Captain easily reads both ports. From a Metz Manta 6, 1/2 wave VHF whip, atop our 42' mizzen in the middle of all those masts at Charleston City Marina, I'm seeing ship transmissions with the SR161 out about 20-25 miles. I suspect it will go further away from the intense paging system interference, once we get it to seaward. The receiver in it is very sensitive to these little 12 watt transmitters, even in this noise. Yes, AIS is very useful for navigation, indeed. Just having that ship's MMSI, name and callsign over there on the horizon, when your boat starts flooding, could save lives..... I want us to have a transponder....I'm working on that goal. Lionheart should be on all those displays by next year....(c; Larry -- Democracy is when two wolves and a sheep vote on who's for dinner. Liberty is when the sheep has his own gun. |
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