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![]() "Jim" wrote in message . .. Paul wrote: Has anyone seen a ship position as reported by AIS being off by over one nautical mile? snip Any thoughts? Thanks, Paul This is really off the wall but is there a possibility that the datum being used was that far off? Isn't the LAT/LON calculated for the chart datum? Jim I don't think so, since the chart datum isn't an issue unless the positions are being shown on a chart (whereas my display is similar to a radar screen). Even so, my boat's position relative to the ship's position should be displayed correctly regardless of any datum discrepancies. What I've got is a situation where a ship that is physically to the north of me is transmitting a latitude that is to the south of me. I'm not completely ruling out cockpit error or bad code on my part, but I can't find it and the raw data seems to exonerate me. If anyone wants to help figure it out, here is the minimum NMEA data capture that shows the situation. The first line is my position, and the second is the AIS message from the ship: $M2RMC,225040,A,4038.518,N,15149.375,W,5.6,072.5,0 40806,014.5,E,D*6 !AIVDM,1,1,,A,15@HsT001wE8wopG@0K5:3=N0@L6,0*6 The "$M2" has been substituted to indicate which multiplexer port the data came from. My position is 40.642433 deg (N), -151.820917 deg (W) The reported ship position is 40.630167 deg (N), -151.822000 deg (W) The range and bearing to the ship are 0.7NM, 183.8 deg true Trust me, the ship was actually to the north. I have photos! -Paul |
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