Digital
Selective Calling (DSC) radio is the latest in marine radio technology. Digital Selective
Calling is part of a global upgrade in maritime distress communications. Satellite and
digital technology used for several years on commercial ships is now available to the
recreational boater. DSC radios allow boaters to make ship-to-ship private calls and the
DSC distress channel is currently being monitored by commercial ships.
Since 1996
recreational boaters were no longer required to have a ship's station license issued by
the FCC in order to operate a VHF radio. The new DSC radios however have to be registered
to work properly in emergency situations. They are also encoded with a unique nine digit
FCC identification number that allows the ship-to-ship calling feature. This unique number
called a Maritime Mobile Service Identity or MMSI, is much like your cell phone number.
Once the radio is registered with the FCC, that information and your boat's information is
entered in the US Coast Guard's national distress database.
The major
advantage of the DSC radio is its ability to send an automatic "mayday" that
identifies the vessel and also, when connected to a LORAN or GPS, can send the vessels
location. The DSC radio operates much like an EPIRB that sends encoded "maydays"
directly to satellites. The DSC radio will also continue sending the emergency signal if
the skipper is disabled.
Another feature
of the DSC radio is the ability to place private ship-to-ship calls to other vessels
equipped with DSC radio. Basically if you know the MMSI number of the radio you are
calling only that vessel will receive you message. Just like using your cell phone.
Although
commercial ships over 300 tons are now required to monitor the DSC Radio reserved Channel
70 for distress calls, the US Coast Guard is still monitoring Channel 16. As the Coast
Guard updates and upgrades there equipment, they should be monitoring DSC Channel 70 in
many areas by 2002-3 and be fully functional and compliant by 2005-6. The USCG's equipment
up grade will include:
DSC capability
to send or receive calls on channel 70
- Eliminate the 65 gaps in
current VHF coverage in the US
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