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VHF channels for marine operator? 24 - 28 and 84 - 87
"Scott Downey" wrote in message ...
9 channels designated for duplex use ties up 18 frequecies or 18 potential channels The marine operator is obsolete and yes it is a waste not being able to use these channels. I will not argue that there isn't a better use for these frequencies. My point was that we don't need any more channels for recreational boater bull****. I'd guess that three quarters of the recreational boater radio traffic I hear on working channels in this area is stuff that shouldn't be tying up those channels in the first place. "Curtis CCR" wrote in message om... "Scott Downey" wrote in message ... So that means two ship radios cant talk together on these channels? FCC and boaters I would think do not like wasted frequencies. I wonder what the plan is for them. Yes that means that two ships/boats cannot talk to eachother. They are intended for ship to shore communications (between ships and public/private coast stations). Marine operators service started going by the wayside in the USA in just the last 10 years. Prior to that, cellphones were widely available but still pricey enough that not everyone had them. How marine channels are used is a international issue. In many parts of the world these duplex channels are still used more than they are in the US. There are a couple of channels that have different uses in the U.S. than in the rest of the world. This is why you have a International / U.S. mode on your set. When foriegn vessels enter U.S. waters they want to be able to use their "international" radios. Likewise, if you take your boat to another country, you may want to be able to contact a coast station on one of those international channels. So just because marine operators are used as much here, doesn't mean the international channel designations should be changed. And in my opinion (worth something to me, but perhaps not you - your call) we don't have a shortage of frequencies. If you can't find an appropriate, clear, working channel it is most likely because many are being used for communications that don't realy belong on them anyway. The marine radio service is not there for bull**** sessions between boaters and drunk fishermen. It should be used for communications that are relative to the safe and efficient operation of vessel, ports, etc. "Wayne.B" wrote in message ... On Tue, 17 Feb 2004 17:44:40 -0500, "Scott Downey" wrote: I was testing my radios by talking back an forth thru each channel. On channels 24 thru 28 and 84 thru 87 the radios do not respond to each other. Is this what you would expect ? I notice these are public correspondance channels are the marine operators no longer in business? Are these channels ever used anymore? ================================================== == Those channels are in "full duplex" mode which means that they transmit and receive are on different frequencies. They were designed to communicate with the old marine operator shore stations, not in "ship-to-ship" mode. Marine operators have become obsolete in most areas since cell phones became widely available. I haven't heard one in years but it's possible that they still exist in some places. Too bad in a way because some of them had very high antennas and could be heard a long way out. We could frequently communicate with the Camden, Maine operator from over 50 miles offshore. |
VHF channels for marine operator? 24 - 28 and 84 - 87
I disagree. It's OK for the fishermen to lie about what they caught, where
they caught it, and what they caught it with ;-), and the divers to chat about dive conditions. Fortunately in Monterey, we have few enough boaters that it's not a problem (except maybe the first couple of weekends of Salmon season), but I can see how it could be a real problem in an area like South Florida that's wall to wall boats. -- Chuck Tribolet http://www.almaden.ibm.com/cs/people/triblet Silicon Valley: STILL the best day job in the world. "Curtis CCR" wrote in message m... I'd guess that three quarters of the recreational boater radio traffic I hear on working channels in this area is stuff that shouldn't be tying up those channels in the first place. |
VHF channels for marine operator? 24 - 28 and 84 - 87
you are the new type of boater that has a new toy and knows
nothing about how to use it and what it is all about. How nice boating was before your type came on the water. Capt. boots "Chuck Tribolet" wrote in message ... I disagree. It's OK for the fishermen to lie about what they caught, where they caught it, and what they caught it with ;-), and the divers to chat about dive conditions. Fortunately in Monterey, we have few enough boaters that it's not a problem (except maybe the first couple of weekends of Salmon season), but I can see how it could be a real problem in an area like South Florida that's wall to wall boats. -- Chuck Tribolet http://www.almaden.ibm.com/cs/people/triblet Silicon Valley: STILL the best day job in the world. "Curtis CCR" wrote in message m... I'd guess that three quarters of the recreational boater radio traffic I hear on working channels in this area is stuff that shouldn't be tying up those channels in the first place. |
VHF channels for marine operator? 24 - 28 and 84 - 87
OK, then, just what is appropriate on the VHF?
-- Chuck Tribolet http://www.almaden.ibm.com/cs/people/triblet Silicon Valley: STILL the best day job in the world. "Boots Crofoot" wrote in message . .. you are the new type of boater that has a new toy and knows nothing about how to use it and what it is all about. How nice boating was before your type came on the water. Capt. boots "Chuck Tribolet" wrote in message ... I disagree. It's OK for the fishermen to lie about what they caught, where they caught it, and what they caught it with ;-), and the divers to chat about dive conditions. Fortunately in Monterey, we have few enough boaters that it's not a problem (except maybe the first couple of weekends of Salmon season), but I can see how it could be a real problem in an area like South Florida that's wall to wall boats. -- Chuck Tribolet http://www.almaden.ibm.com/cs/people/triblet Silicon Valley: STILL the best day job in the world. "Curtis CCR" wrote in message m... I'd guess that three quarters of the recreational boater radio traffic I hear on working channels in this area is stuff that shouldn't be tying up those channels in the first place. |
VHF channels for marine operator? 24 - 28 and 84 - 87
Then point the OP in the right direction for help.
On Fri, 20 Feb 2004 15:51:19 -0600, "Boots Crofoot" wrote: you are the new type of boater that has a new toy and knows nothing about how to use it and what it is all about. How nice boating was before your type came on the water. Capt. boots "Chuck Tribolet" wrote in message ... I disagree. It's OK for the fishermen to lie about what they caught, where they caught it, and what they caught it with ;-), and the divers to chat about dive conditions. Fortunately in Monterey, we have few enough boaters that it's not a problem (except maybe the first couple of weekends of Salmon season), but I can see how it could be a real problem in an area like South Florida that's wall to wall boats. |
VHF channels for marine operator? 24 - 28 and 84 - 87
Chuck, I wouldn't worry about "Capt." Boots - he sure sounded grumpy about a
boater asking questions. It's the ones who don't ask questions he should worry about. Here in Canada, the appropriate authorities have a list of what channels are allowable for what purposes, which varies geographically, and I was able, much to my surprise, to get them to say in writing that unassigned channels could be used at will! Perhaps such a list is available in the U.S. as well - I would be surprised were it not. Duplex channels for recreational boaters here are generally used for communicating with the Canadian Coast Guard, in which case the "duplex" nature of the channel is transparent. It's just that other boaters can only hear the Coast Guard side of the interchange. We also have VHF courses, and I'm sure you do too. The ones I'm familiar with are offered through the Power Squadron, sanctioned by the appropriate government department, and passing the test gives us a life-long restricted operator's certificate. In the U.S. of course it's www.usps.org, and I suspect the Coast Guard Auxiliary (www.cgaux.org/) also offers similar courses. ==== Charles T. Low - remove "UN" www.boatdocking.com/BDPhoto.html - Photo Contest www.boatdocking.com www.ctlow.ca/Trojan26 - my boat ==== "Chuck Tribolet" wrote in message ... OK, then, just what is appropriate on the VHF? -- Chuck Tribolet http://www.almaden.ibm.com/cs/people/triblet |
VHF channels for marine operator? 24 - 28 and 84 - 87
Ok that makes sense that other boaters would only hear the coast guard shore
station, BUT what about the guy on the boat the CG shore station is talking to? Isn't he in the same position as anyone else listening? If another boater is on the same frequency as the one the CG is talking to wont he hear both sides? Is the duplex send frequency at the shore station different for each duplex channel? I have heard this before and still dont understand it. "Charles T. Low" wrote in message .. . Chuck, I wouldn't worry about "Capt." Boots - he sure sounded grumpy about a boater asking questions. It's the ones who don't ask questions he should worry about. Here in Canada, the appropriate authorities have a list of what channels are allowable for what purposes, which varies geographically, and I was able, much to my surprise, to get them to say in writing that unassigned channels could be used at will! Perhaps such a list is available in the U.S. as well - I would be surprised were it not. Duplex channels for recreational boaters here are generally used for communicating with the Canadian Coast Guard, in which case the "duplex" nature of the channel is transparent. It's just that other boaters can only hear the Coast Guard side of the interchange. We also have VHF courses, and I'm sure you do too. The ones I'm familiar with are offered through the Power Squadron, sanctioned by the appropriate government department, and passing the test gives us a life-long restricted operator's certificate. In the U.S. of course it's www.usps.org, and I suspect the Coast Guard Auxiliary (www.cgaux.org/) also offers similar courses. ==== Charles T. Low - remove "UN" www.boatdocking.com/BDPhoto.html - Photo Contest www.boatdocking.com www.ctlow.ca/Trojan26 - my boat ==== "Chuck Tribolet" wrote in message ... OK, then, just what is appropriate on the VHF? -- Chuck Tribolet http://www.almaden.ibm.com/cs/people/triblet |
VHF channels for marine operator? 24 - 28 and 84 - 87
No, here's how it goes with duplex:
All of the boaters' radios listen to channel 4017 (hypothetical) on frequency 200.150 MHz (hypothetical) and transmit on 200.220 (I'm just making these numbers up). The land station does the reverse. Follow that information on to its logical conclusion and I think you'll see what I mean. A boater and a land station can carry on a conversation just fine, but two boaters cannot. The question is why, and I think it's because more highly-qualified radio operators can use duplex to carry on a two-way conversation, like on a conventional telephone, using a different radio for receiving than transmitting (although the two radios could both be in the same box - like a telephone!). The way we recreational boaters do it, at least to my knowledge and in my experience, is to carry on a one-way conversation, e.g. transmit, then another one-way conversation on another frequency, i.e. receive, although you don't have to change your channel setting to do that - the radio changed frequencies for you, but without changing the same channel number, when you switch back and forth between transmitting and receiving. But one radio can't receive and transmit simultaneously, whether in simplex or duplex mode, so it doesn't make any difference, to the recreational marine VHF radio operator, whether it's duplex or simplex - except for other eavesdropping boaters. Is that any clearer? ==== Charles T. Low - remove "UN" www.boatdocking.com/BDPhoto.html - Photo Contest www.boatdocking.com www.ctlow.ca/Trojan26 - my boat ==== "Scott Downey" wrote in message ... Ok that makes sense that other boaters would only hear the coast guard shore station, BUT what about the guy on the boat the CG shore station is talking to? Isn't he in the same position as anyone else listening? If another boater is on the same frequency as the one the CG is talking to wont he hear both sides? Is the duplex send frequency at the shore station different for each duplex channel? I have heard this before and still dont understand it. |
VHF channels for marine operator? 24 - 28 and 84 - 87
sure, the duplex channels are separated so each person transmitting does not
step on the other persons transmission, therefore both could talk and be heard if you had 2 radios or a special radio where you could hear and talk at the same time. But if you have 2 boaters both on the same duplex channel talking to one shore station on its own complemntary channel, each boater should be part of the same conversation. There would be no difference between them as they would both be using the same duplex channel. So therefore another boater ought to be able to listen in if tuned to the same duplex channel that the other boater was using talking to the shore station. Does anyone sell a special radio that allows one to hear and talk at the same time? I dont see that in the catalogs. Using 2 radios is a work around, I suppose. "Charles T. Low" wrote in message .. . No, here's how it goes with duplex: All of the boaters' radios listen to channel 4017 (hypothetical) on frequency 200.150 MHz (hypothetical) and transmit on 200.220 (I'm just making these numbers up). The land station does the reverse. Follow that information on to its logical conclusion and I think you'll see what I mean. A boater and a land station can carry on a conversation just fine, but two boaters cannot. The question is why, and I think it's because more highly-qualified radio operators can use duplex to carry on a two-way conversation, like on a conventional telephone, using a different radio for receiving than transmitting (although the two radios could both be in the same box - like a telephone!). The way we recreational boaters do it, at least to my knowledge and in my experience, is to carry on a one-way conversation, e.g. transmit, then another one-way conversation on another frequency, i.e. receive, although you don't have to change your channel setting to do that - the radio changed frequencies for you, but without changing the same channel number, when you switch back and forth between transmitting and receiving. But one radio can't receive and transmit simultaneously, whether in simplex or duplex mode, so it doesn't make any difference, to the recreational marine VHF radio operator, whether it's duplex or simplex - except for other eavesdropping boaters. Is that any clearer? ==== Charles T. Low - remove "UN" www.boatdocking.com/BDPhoto.html - Photo Contest www.boatdocking.com www.ctlow.ca/Trojan26 - my boat ==== "Scott Downey" wrote in message ... Ok that makes sense that other boaters would only hear the coast guard shore station, BUT what about the guy on the boat the CG shore station is talking to? Isn't he in the same position as anyone else listening? If another boater is on the same frequency as the one the CG is talking to wont he hear both sides? Is the duplex send frequency at the shore station different for each duplex channel? I have heard this before and still dont understand it. |
VHF channels for marine operator? 24 - 28 and 84 - 87
You only hear the shore station side. Your and the other boaters radio
transmit on a frequency that the radios do not receive. Bill "Scott Downey" wrote in message ... sure, the duplex channels are separated so each person transmitting does not step on the other persons transmission, therefore both could talk and be heard if you had 2 radios or a special radio where you could hear and talk at the same time. But if you have 2 boaters both on the same duplex channel talking to one shore station on its own complemntary channel, each boater should be part of the same conversation. There would be no difference between them as they would both be using the same duplex channel. So therefore another boater ought to be able to listen in if tuned to the same duplex channel that the other boater was using talking to the shore station. Does anyone sell a special radio that allows one to hear and talk at the same time? I dont see that in the catalogs. Using 2 radios is a work around, I suppose. "Charles T. Low" wrote in message .. . No, here's how it goes with duplex: All of the boaters' radios listen to channel 4017 (hypothetical) on frequency 200.150 MHz (hypothetical) and transmit on 200.220 (I'm just making these numbers up). The land station does the reverse. Follow that information on to its logical conclusion and I think you'll see what I mean. A boater and a land station can carry on a conversation just fine, but two boaters cannot. The question is why, and I think it's because more highly-qualified radio operators can use duplex to carry on a two-way conversation, like on a conventional telephone, using a different radio for receiving than transmitting (although the two radios could both be in the same box - like a telephone!). The way we recreational boaters do it, at least to my knowledge and in my experience, is to carry on a one-way conversation, e.g. transmit, then another one-way conversation on another frequency, i.e. receive, although you don't have to change your channel setting to do that - the radio changed frequencies for you, but without changing the same channel number, when you switch back and forth between transmitting and receiving. But one radio can't receive and transmit simultaneously, whether in simplex or duplex mode, so it doesn't make any difference, to the recreational marine VHF radio operator, whether it's duplex or simplex - except for other eavesdropping boaters. Is that any clearer? ==== Charles T. Low - remove "UN" www.boatdocking.com/BDPhoto.html - Photo Contest www.boatdocking.com www.ctlow.ca/Trojan26 - my boat ==== "Scott Downey" wrote in message ... Ok that makes sense that other boaters would only hear the coast guard shore station, BUT what about the guy on the boat the CG shore station is talking to? Isn't he in the same position as anyone else listening? If another boater is on the same frequency as the one the CG is talking to wont he hear both sides? Is the duplex send frequency at the shore station different for each duplex channel? I have heard this before and still dont understand it. |
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