Sr161 220.JPGIn my previous post I mention our gee-whiz, super cool new AIS system. Here’s Jack the Skipper with the the details.

The Universal Shipborne Automatic Identification System, or AIS, is required of all large commercial vessels in the air and on sea. The system “squawks” out basic information: name, call sign, heading, speed, length and destination. With the exception of military vessels, all other large ships are required to have complex, expensive transmitters that continuously send out this wealth of information to other vessels.

An AIS receiver is a little black box that doesn’t “squawk” but “listens” to the VHF channels that carries the information coming from the larger commercial vessels. This little box is available from an innovative Seattle-based company called Milltech Marine for $189. (Two other, more expensive units are also available, but the cheap one works fine).

VHF Splitter 220They also sell VHF antennas that fit the black box. These include a very cheap, very short antenna that’s not recommended and two that are. One is a dedicted new VHF antenna and the other is a “VHF antenna splitter,”that lets you use your existing antenna.

The AIS black box and VHF antenna splitter both require a 12 volt power source, which you can wire from your main electrical panel. However two cheap 6 volt batteries joined in series will give you the necessary power while you’re testing the systems, particularly if you’re not comfortable going into the DC panel.

Milltech also tells you which GPS charting programs are compatible. They list about 15, including two that are Mac compatible.

The Milltech webpage is designed for recreational mariners. It gives you step by step info on setting up the system using your PC or Mac laptop. Bottom line: Milltech is a winner: reasonably-priced products, complete tech specs on the web, great customer service, and prompt replies to emailed questions.

2 responses to “Jack the Skipper on AIS”

  1. […] October 18, 2008 · No Comments WhereCampPDX unconference scheduleIt was to be a lovely sunny afternoon and I was thinking that I’d like to go down to the Columbia to work on the Balliwick and Upstart with the OWSA work team that got started last week. But with WhereCampPDX being pretty fascinating, why not just find some sailors to talk to. So I grabbed a big yellow stickie and put it up in the schedule. On the seas! navigation, radar, AIS. All low tech stuff, but highlighting free data from others as in our cool, cheap AIS set up as guest-posted by Jack on Baggywrinkles Blog. […]

  2. […] with  MacENC installed.  All the US and Canadian charts appear here in brilliant color and accept AIS data, which shows us any large vessels in the area.   Then for use up on deck we have a couple of […]

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