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"Lynn Coffelt" wrote in
: Is AIS used on relatively unmovable objects such as rocks and small islands? There are quite a few radar beacons in use, but some radar receiver interference rejection schemes wipe them off the screen too. (I almost said "scope", nearly revealing my age!) Radar requires the target to be REFLECTIVE, not absorptive or transparent to RF. That's what that funny ball hanging from the already reflective metal mast is, it makes you more reflective. A wet, plastic boat with an RF absorptive human isn't going to cut it. The seawater returns more than that.... As to your AIS barb...YES! But, your concept of AIS being located on a bouy is all wet, so to speak. AIS has no bearing on it being mounted ON the object it reports. That transmitter can be anywhere, as long as it is in VHF range of the receivers. Fixed objects and Notice to Mariners objects only need one, central transmitter high enough to cover the entire area. This transmitter broadcasts the data of all these objects every X minutes, to the delight of every AIS-equipped boat in range. That range can be substantial. The sooner this equipment is installed and the CG forced, kicking and screaming, to maintain its database with all the latest data, the better! For instance, a report comes in from the "Lady Disaster" that there is a new object gone aground on "Monster Bank" at X lat/Y long, and represents a hazard to navigation. The broadcast noone listens to goes out on Channel 22 and falls on deaf ears. Admit it, you don't listen to it when you're out, do you? I thought not. Who the hell's got time to plot these broadcasts? However, the duty watch at the CG base also enters the new object into the AIS database the fixed area transmitter draws its data from. The very next transmission cycle, the new object shows up on ever AIS display/chartplotter within 50 miles of the TV tower the transmitter is located on. You can easily see the new obstruction. It's right there on your display at the helm. The bouy tender has arrived to assess the situation at "Jim Island" found to be shifting into the channel. Bouy 4C is nearly sitting on dry land because of the current shift and they lift it out and service its batteries, replacing a bad bulb in the bulb rack in the head. They replace the bouy in a new position further out in the channel than it was to mark a safe distance from the new beach Jim Island is building for the kids to play on next spring. Job completed, the duty radioman pops up his AIS update screen on the ship's computer and logs onto the local AIS database, right from Jim Island. He pops up Bouy 4C's record and enters the new lat/long of its new position, making a note on its comment section of the building beach to warn AIS-equipped boats to be wary as it is still building. INSTANTLY, on the next transmission 86 seconds later, every AIS-equipped boat notices 4C move to its new location and can read that comment if they click up the bouy on their AIS-enabled chartplotter. How long would it currently take to note 4C has moved 300 yards into the channel, or a new warning come out from any authority now in use? Weeks? Months? 12 days after the damned bouy has to be moved again?! The sooner the better. There is NO TRANSMITTER ON ANY BOUY on an AIS system! Totally unnecessary. There needs to be a central database and high transmitter to cover the whole area on the AIS system... AIS is about DATA, not direction finding. Larry -- Wow. Halloween candy has gotten cheap, lately! |
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