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Join Date: Oct 2009
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Here Comes Class B part2
The diagram shows how a vessel going 30 knots for one minute would look as a target in radar, Class A AIS, and Class B AIS. Software could do old-fashioned dead reckoning on Class B targets—using their heading and speed to advance their plots—but it will only work well on targets that maintain course, and the idea of it not working well worries many developers. I'm guessing that a graphical solution will be invented eventually, but in the meantime prepare yourself for jumping bean AIS targets, which will be even worse if you are using one of the inexpensive one-channel-at-a-time AIS receivers that have been popular during phase two. They typically switch back and forth between the two AIS VHF channels, receiving only half the total messages sent, which was good enough for Class A but means a full minute plot lag for Class B targets. Besides the likelihood that these single-channel receivers will go out of fashion, receiver sensitivity will become more critical as weaker Class B messages abound. That's why it may be useful to know which Class B units use SRT's PCB, as they should all perform similarly, and why I'm keeping an eye on the American company Shine Micro, which has a sterling performance reputation based on its dual channel receivers, and its own Class B design. a d v e r t i s e m e n t Click Here! I'll add here that, on top of the predictable growing pains, a few boaters are truly skeptical about Class B, feeling that the standard is too constrained for effective collision avoidance and that the authorities are much more interested in using it for Big Brother-type coastal monitoring anyway. In fact the Coast Guard does see Class B as a possibly valuable element in Homeland Security, but that's in addition to its tremendous safety potential. I've heard the undeniable enthusiasm in Arroyo's voice. Norris, too, is an overall believer, writing that in "educated" hands Class B will be "a powerful and affordable onboard tool to avoid close contact with SOLAS vessels." But I'll give the last word to another nav guru, Milt Baker, because he and his wife Judy recently cruised their Nordhavn 47 Bluewater (like the Books and Chart company they founded) more than 8,500 miles using a Nobeltec dual-channel AIS receiver. Milt says, "AIS is a giant step forward that will save thousands of lives and millions of dollars in damage in the decades ahead." Bluewater is headed transatlantic this summer, equipped with a new Furuno Class A transponder, which is an increasingly more affordable option for any vessel. But most of us will wait for Class B, which may even be here by the time you read this. |
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