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Stephanie, a 1954 Stephens Express
Progress on the Piers
Attessa Visiting Sausalito
Sausalito Sunset
The Blue Angels streaking over San Francisco
Financial District from the East

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Get AIS Ship Tracking on Your Boat

You can equip your boat to receive the same AIS signals that are used to create the ship tracking page on BoatingSF.com. To do so, you generally need two pieces of equipment:

  1. An AIS transponder or receiver
  2. A display device capable of processing the AIS messages and showing ship positions

AIS Transponders and Receivers

If you want your boat to be visible to others with AIS receivers, you need an AIS transponder. Very few non-commercial boats are equipped with transponders today. Transponders come in two types: Class A, which is required on all commercial ships of more than 300 gross tons and on all passenger vessels, and Class B, which is designed for use on boats that are not required to have AIS and thus can use a slightly less-capable transponder. Manufacturers of Class A units, which cost several thousand dollars, include Simrad, ACR, JCR, McMurdo, and Furuno. Shine Micro is one company making a Class B transponder; the price is $1000, but as of this writing it is awaiting FCC approval and is only available to non-US customers.

A much less expensive alternative is a receive-only AIS unit. This allows you to view all AIS transmissions, but not to transmit your own position. Our ship tracking display is powered by the SR161 receiver, which is distributed in the U.S. by Milltech Marine and is currently on sale for $189. This low-cost device, manufactured in China by Smart Radio Holdings Ltd., receives on only one channel at a time (there are two channels used for AIS transmissions). It switches automatically from one channel to the other when needed, but this is not quite as robust as a true two-channel unit. The two-channel SR162 may be a better choice if you're using the information for real-time navigation; it sells for $439.

Other receive-only AIS devices include NASA Marine Instruments' AIS Engine, the Easy AIS receiver, and the SafePassage AIS system from SeaCAS.

You'll also need a standard VHF antenna for the AIS receiver. You can't directly share the antenna used by your VHF transceiver because when you transmit it would blow out your AIS receiver. There are automatic antenna switches available, but you're better off just installing a second antenna.

Displaying the AIS Information

AIS receivers provide an RS-232 output, which presents the AIS information using a standard NMEA protocol. Some recent-model chartplotters are able to decode these signals and display the AIS information on the chart, but most existing models are not. If you use a notebook PC on board, there's lots of options to view the AIS information. Here's a few of them:

  • The very inexpensive ShipPlotter program not only can display the AIS information from the serial output of one of the receivers listed above, it can even do the decoding of the analog radio signal from a standard VHF receiver (but this requires some modification of the receiver). You can also upload the information you receive to a Web service run by the company, and download the reports from everyone else around the world who is uploading reports.
  • SeaClear is a free PC-based navigation program that includes AIS support.
  • Commercial navigation software, such as Nobeltec's Visual Navigation Suite and Admiral, Fugawi Marine ENC, Maptech's Chart Navigator Pro, and Rose Point Software's Coastal Explorer include the ability to show AIS information on top of navigational charts.

For more information on AIS, see our How AIS Works page.