USCG Safety Alert Concerning DSC-equipped VHFsFROM PRACTICAL SAILOR USCG Safety Alert Concerning DSC-equipped VHFsIs your DSC-capable VHF properly set up?
All three of these Standard Horizon VHFs have DSC functions. The 850S (far left) and GX5500S (above) have full DSC capability. The HX600S-LI (immediate left) has only distress-alerting. Most of today’s fixed VHF marine radios come equipped with Digital Selective Calling (DSC) capability, and many high-end handheld VHFs do as well. For years, Practical Sailor has recommend that buyers select a DSC-equipped model with this capability—and for good reason: As the U.S. Coast Guard’s new marine radio network Rescue 21 becomes operational throughout the U.S., rescue centers are able to receive instant distress alerts from DSC-capable VHF radios. However, spending the extra money to have a feature-loaded, DSC-capable VHF offers little benefit if you do not have the radio properly registered and set up. The Coast Guard recently issued a safety alert, warning that mariners were endangering their lives and those of their crew by having a DSC-capable VHF that lacks identifying information. According to the notice, about 90 percent of VHF DSC distress alerts received by the Coast Guard do not contain position information, and approximately 60 percent lack a registered Maritime Mobile Installation Identity (MMSI) number. Without this information, the Coast Guard cannot effectively respond to a DSC distress alert. In fact, search-and-rescue efforts may normally be suspended when no communication can be established with the distressed boat, no further information or means of contacting the boat can be obtained from other sources, and no position information is known. The steps involved in properly setting up DSC-capable electronics—obtaining an MMSI, entering it into the device, and interfacing it with a GPS—are fairly simple. But not taking the steps is essentially like buying a life raft and then leaving it at the dock. If you have a VHF with DSC function, be sure you have all of the possible data input and that it is up to date, and if possible, link it to your GPS so that search-and-rescue operators will have your location information. Here’s a rundown on how to get an MMSI, along with the answers to some frequently asked questions we receive regarding DSC. (More information can be found at the Coast Guard’s Navigation Center website, www.navcen.uscg.gov.)
A DSC transmission includes the priority of the call (distress, urgency, safety, routine), who the call is being sent to (all ships or a specific ship/station), and the transmitting boat’s identity, location, and nature of distress. DSC also allows sailors to use their VHF radios like a cell phone for ship-to-ship and ship-to-shore communications, without interfering with VHF hailing traffic and without the limitations and cost of cell coverage.
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