All tied up at a dock. Engines down. No other stationary vessel I can find on AIS shows that.Tied to a dock, mooring or at anchor?
That makes sense, Ted. Direction does not change because there is not enough heading change. It is very tidal with wide river outflow speed and current shifts. I guess it could be working on the lines like a bungee with the current. Interesting. Two other boats nearby show a constant 0 speed.Simply, if the system isn't malfunctioning, either the boat is moving back and forth quickly (not tight to the dock) or the GPS antenna is moving around. If you watch the AIS display, the heading of the boat should be changing if it's moving back and forth.
Could be but either way you wouldn't think it would show movement when it has been fast to the dock for days.Capt.Bill11; said:There is a difference between what you'd see on the AIS on your plotter in real time and what you're seeing on an AIS site like Marine Traffic I'll bet.
psneeld said:some GPS inputs do jump around a lot while sitting still...
There we go. 'Splains a lot.twistedtree; said:Normal GPS error will result in more or less random COG and SOG when standing still. Some GPSs do averaging so they mostly report zero SOG when anchored or moored, but not all do.
Funny only those two showed movement.Hawg
I have been watching Midnight Sun move around on shore close to her shelter in the Fraser over the last few weeks. May be something that being covered by the shelter roof is doing to the signal? I'll let the owner know, as he is a friend of mine and it is time I called.
Funny only those two showed movement.
I know you can't answer this but, why do so many folks leave the AIS on while it's in the nest? Do they set the alarm and wake up at 3am to see if it's still there?
No confusion here. I am fully aware of the limitations of the mobile app. due to web technology, older browsers, range, terrestrial vs satellite bla, bla, bla...FlyWright; said:I think you're confusing AIS with an online lookalike such as marinetraffic or boatbeacon. In the words of Ronald Reagan, "Trust but verify."
No confusion here. I am fully aware of the limitations of the mobile app. due to web technology, older browsers, range, terrestrial vs satellite bla, bla, bla..
I can see why marinetraffic.com has delays. But I don't see why it would have inaccuracies. It relies on data sent by reporting stations that receive AIS transmissions. Do those somehow get corrupted before being displayed on marinetraffic?Hawgwash and markpierce, I think you're confusing AIS with an online lookalike such as marinetraffic or boatbeacon. Those online versions have serious delays and inaccuracies. I wouldn't trust them like one could trust a real AIS. But even with a real AIS, it's just smart to cross reference with other sources like radar, eyeballs, etc. In the words of Ronald Reagan, "Trust but verify."
Aha! Sorta like reading TF, huh?it's an app for crying out loud, that relies on 2nd hand data. Is anybody really surprised it's not dead nuts accurate all the time!?
Richard, I run marinetraffic and boatbeacon on my tablet while underway. Both have inaccuracies with boats in the wrong position (delay?), boats shown present which are not (ghosting?) present commercial vessels not displayed and docked vessels showing speed which might be from historical data. I've never used a proper AIS.
Here's my thinking. It's one thing for it to be out of date, it's another for it to publish inaccurate data. After all, these are AIS data packets that are being reported by volunteer stations. They may be delayed, they may be intermittent, but they would need to be corrupted for them to be inaccurate.it's an app for crying out loud, that relies on 2nd hand data. Is anybody really surprised it's not dead nuts accurate all the time!?
it's an app for crying out loud, that relies on 2nd hand data. Is anybody really surprised it's not dead nuts accurate all the time!?
TwistedTree says: "And last, somewhere in the Seattle area well inland up towards Edmunds someone has a boat parked in their driveway (or maybe it's a land receiver that is also transmitting) called "Simrad". I see it on my plotter anytime I run up/down the sound."
That's Simrad's office in Lynnwood where they have a testing lab.