ranger58sb
Guru
- Joined
- Aug 21, 2013
- Messages
- 7,343
- Location
- Annapolis
- Vessel Name
- Ranger
- Vessel Make
- 58' Sedan Bridge
I just noticed (what I think is) an odd thing about some of the Marinetraffic.com AIS reporting. I've seen instances where a boat in a given harbor is reported via satellite (more info available for $$$), whereas several other AIS-equipped boats in the same harbor are reported by a local Marinetraffic receive/forward station (vessel name and nationality and so forth immediately available).
The boats reported via sateliite are at least as close to the local receive/forward stations as some of the other nearby vessels, in fact sometimes apparently adjacent (within the limits of available display scale). Near as I can tell, it doesn't appear to be a Class A vs/ Class B thing...
Thought maybe somebody here might know how/why that can happen, when I reminded myself of points made in this thread:
http://www.trawlerforum.com/forums/s3/closest-point-approach-46431.html
Points like this, for example:
Any clues?
-Chris
The boats reported via sateliite are at least as close to the local receive/forward stations as some of the other nearby vessels, in fact sometimes apparently adjacent (within the limits of available display scale). Near as I can tell, it doesn't appear to be a Class A vs/ Class B thing...
Thought maybe somebody here might know how/why that can happen, when I reminded myself of points made in this thread:
http://www.trawlerforum.com/forums/s3/closest-point-approach-46431.html
Points like this, for example:
Sometimes it takes a while for our system to resolve an MMSI into a name. Dunno why... Maybe the MMSI transmits every time, name only every other sometimes?
Yes, that's exactly how it works. You "dynamic" data is transmitted regularly updating you position, COG, and SOG. And "static" data is transmitted much less frequently, so the boat's name, dimensions, call sign, etc. can take a while after first contact to populate.
Any clues?
-Chris