What are the GMDSS requirements?

Similar documents
GMDSS communication systems

ATTACHMENT E. How to Conduct a GMDSS Inspection.

Global Maritime Distress and Safety System (GMDSS)

GMDSS RADIO INSTALLATION

Record of approved GMDSS radio installation

Report GMDSS Radio survey

American Marine Training Center, LLC AMTC (2682)

CEPT/ERC/RECOMMENDATION E (Bonn 1994)

Merchant Shipping Act 57 of 1951 section 356

GOVERNMENT GAZETTE REPUBLIC OF NAMIBIA

NC4FB FCC Commercial License Element 7 Questions

RULES FOR THE CONSTRUCTION AND CLASSIFICATION OF MOBILE OFFSHORE DRILLING UNITS TITLE MOBILE OFFSHORE DRILLING UNITS NAUTIC AND ELECTRONICS CHAPTERS

GMDSS GUIDE.

OPERATIONS SEAFARER CERTIFICATION GUIDANCE NOTE SA MARITIME QUALIFICATIONS CODE SHORT RANGE CERTIFICATE (SRC)

INTERNATIONAL STANDARD

The Future in Marine Radio Communication GMDSS. Department of Transportation United States Coast Guard

Hong Kong Telecommunications Equipment Evaluation and Certification (HKTEC) Scheme. OFCA Schedule Fee For Certification Service by SGS Hong Kong Ltd.

RESOLUTION MSC.131(75) (adopted on 21 May 2002) MAINTENANCE OF A CONTINUOUS LISTENING WATCH ON VHF CHANNEL 16 BY SOLAS SHIPS WHILST AT SEA AFTER 1

Radio Log Book. for Canadian Flag Vessels. 1 Master s Signature. Transports Canada. Transport Canada TP 13926E MARINE SAFETY

SCHEDULE. No. R April 2002 MERCHANT SHIPPING (RADIO INSTALLATIONS) REGULATIONS, Regulation No. PART 1 GENERAL

MARITIME MANAGEMENT Receive and transmit information

VDES: Next Generation AIS in the Review & Modernization of the GMDSS

L AGENCE NATIONALE DES FREQUENCES (ANFR) From Titanic to satellite from Morse to digital Entry in a new era for the maritime community

FREQUENCIES FOR DISTRESS AND SAFETY, SEARCH AND RESCUE AND EMERGENCIES

IS Shore Based Maintenance. Definition and Pricing

RESOLUTION A.659(16) adopted on 19 October 1989 PROVISION OF RADIO SERVICES FOR THE GLOBAL MARITIME DISTRESS AND SAFETY SYSTEM

ARTICLE 32 Operational procedures for distress communications in the global maritime distress and safety system (GMDSS) (WRC-07) Section I _ General

GMDSS modernisation and e-navigation: spectrum needs

QUESTIONNAIRE ON SHORE-BASED FACILITIES FOR THE GLOBAL MARITIME DISTRESS AND SAFETY SYSTEM (GMDSS)

REVISED QUESTIONNAIRE ON SHORE-BASED FACILITIES FOR THE GLOBAL MARITIME DISTRESS AND SAFETY SYSTEM (GMDSS)

WWNWS8/3/4/1e Meeting 8 26 July 2016 Agenda Item 3.4.1e. Report of the Correspondence Group on the Review of the GMDSS. Submitted by IHB SUMMARY

American Marine Training Center, LLC AMTC (2682)

Digital broadcasting systems under development within ITU-R of interest for the maritime community

Meeting 5 18 July 2013 Agenda Item 2.1. Submitted by IHB SUMMARY

RECOMMENDATION ITU-R M.541-8*

MARITIME RADIO SYSTEMS FOR DISTRESS ALERTING

MEMORANDUM NO MAY Directives Affected. Reference (a) is temporarily augmented by this policy letter.

IMO HARMONIZATION OF GMDSS REQUIREMENTS FOR RADIO INSTALLATIONS ON BOARD SOLAS SHIPS. Submitted by Germany

Subelement A Rules & Regulations: 6 Key Topics, 6 Exam Questions

Digital Selective Calling (DSC) Radios

for including related operational recommendations and guidance

Service Suppliers Engaged in the Inspection and Testing of Radio Communication Equipment and Automatic Identification System on Vessels

The Global Maritime Distress and Safety System (GMDSS) Vox Maris GMDSS Simulator

New Regulations WRC NBDP Radiotelex / VHF

INTERNATIONAL STANDARD

GMDSS for Recreational Boaters

TECHNICAL COMMITTEE 80: MARITIME NAVIGATION AND RADIOCOMMUNICATION EQUIPMENT AND SYSTEMS INTERNATIONAL ELECTROTECHNICAL COMMISSION

Maritime Communications

Notified Body No.: 0575

Maritime Radio Transmitters and Receivers in the Band MHz

International Maritime Organization DRAFT IMO POSITION ON WRC-19 AGENDA ITEMS CONCERNING MATTERS RELATING TO MARITIME SERVICES

International Maritime Organization

Communication & Safety at Sea

REVIEW AND MODERNIZATION OF THE GMDSS. Report of the Correspondence Group - First draft of the high level review. Submitted by the United States

Communication & Safety at Sea

iii Marine Radio Operators Handbook Australian Maritime College 2002 ISBN

Marine Radio Communication

Manual for use by the Maritime Mobile and Maritime Mobile-Satellite Services

We as a SAMSA accredited training institution will offer the SRC course to meet the following minimum requirements:

AMENDMENTS TO RESOLUTION A.705(17) PROMULGATION OF MARITIME SAFETY INFORMATION

VHF SHORT RANGE CERTIFICATE PRE-COURSE READING

DRAFT ASSEMBLY RESOLUTION A. (26)

RESOLUTION A.703(17) adopted on 6 November 1991 TRAINING OF RADIO PERSONNEL IN THE GLOBAL MARITIME DISTRESS AND SAFETY SYSTEM (GMDSS)

International Telecommunication Union

Integration of AIS functionalities

Maritime (Radio) Regulations 2014

Information for all SRC Radio students

How to Conduct a Bridge to Bridge Inspection

FOR MORE INFORMATION ON GMDSS CONTACT:

WRITTEN TEST Certificate for the operation of maritime VHF radio systems (SRC)

Proposed 40-series Rule Amendments. Invitation to Comment

CONSIDERATION OF THE OUTCOME OF WRC-12 AND PREPARATION OF INITIAL ADVICE ON A DRAFT IMO POSITION ON WRC-2015 AGENDA ITEMS

The radio operator decision support system model

IS SHORE-BASED MAINTENANCE

MODULAR GMDSS COMMUNICATION SYSTEM DSC2 USER MANUAL. ICS Electronics Ltd

COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS FOR SAFETY AND SECURITY OF SHIPS

DEVELOPMENT OF A DEFINITION FOR MSPS AND CONSIDERATION FOR THE HARMONIZATION OF THE FORMAT AND STRUCTURE OF MSPS

GMDSS TUTOR TGS-5000 V.8.3

IMO RESOLUTION A.1001(25) Adopted on 29 November 2007 (Agenda item 9)

CPRNW. WWNWS9/3/3/3.2 Meeting 9 20 July 2017 Agenda Item Joint MET/NAVAREA XVII and XVIII Client Survey

IMO GUIDELINES TO ADMINISTRATIONS ON REPORTING FALSE ALERTS

INTERNATIONAL STANDARD

Models: FS-1575 (150 W) FS-2575 (250 W) FS-5075 (500 W)

Required GMDSS equipment

This is a preview - click here to buy the full publication INTERNATIONAL. IEC 1997 Copyright - all rights reserved

HF Weather Broadcasting. How much longer will it last? Russell Levin, US Coast Guard

Extent of Consultation

Õppeainete loend, maht ja ajakava GENERAL OPERATOR S CERTIFICATE FOR GMDSS

INTERNATIONAL STANDARD

SUMMARY: The Coast Guard is declaring Sea Area A1 in certain. areas off the coast of the United States based upon the

MARINE RADIO IN A NUTSHELLv5 CONTENTS

Meeting 6 11 August 2014 Agenda Item 2.2a. Submitted by IHB SUMMARY

ITU Service Publications (maritime) and MARS (Maritime mobile Access and Retrieval System)

VHF SHORT RANGE CERTIFICATE COURSE

UK Interface Requirement 2039

Procedures. Federal Communications Commission (FCC)

IMO. Resolution A.954(23) Adopted on 5 December 2003 (Agenda item 17) PROPER USE OF VHF CHANNELS AT SEA

Understanding GMDSS. The Global Maritime Distress and Safety System. L. Tetl ey I. Eng., F.I.E.I.E. D. Calcutt M.Sc., C.Eng., M.I.E.E.

RESOLUTION A.803(19) adopted on 23 November 1995 PERFORMANCE STANDARDS FOR SHIPBORNE VHF RADIO INSTALLATIONS CAPABLE OF VOICE COMMUNICATION AND

Transcription:

What are the GMDSS requirements? Minimum requirements GMDSS ships are required to carry the following minimum equipment: A VHF radio installation capable of transmitting DSC on channel 70, and radiotelephony on channels 16, 13 and 6. (see Note 1). One SART if under 500 GRT, 2 SARTs if over 500 GRT. Two portable VHF transceivers for use in survival craft if under 500 GRT, three if over 500 GRT. A NAVTEX receiver, if the ship is engaged on voyages in any area where a NAVTEX service is provided. An Inmarsat EGC receiver, if the ship is engaged on voyages in any area of Inmarsat coverage where MSI services are not provided by NAVTEX or HF NBDP (see note 2). A 406 MHz EPIRB Note 1 - Voice watch is effectively required on channel 16 until further notice. Note 2 - in practice, this means that all GMDSS A3 and A4 vessels are required to carry at least one Inmarsat C system. Radio equipment - Sea area Al Every ship engaged on voyages exclusively in sea area A1 shall be provided with the minimum equipment specified previously. Radio equipment - Sea areas A1 and A2 Every ship engaged on voyages beyond sea area A1, but remaining within sea area A2, shall be provided with the minimum equipment specified previously, plus: An MF radio installation capable of transmitting and receiving on the frequencies 2187.5 khz using DSC and 2182 khz using radiotelephony; and a DSC watchkeeping receiver operating on 2187.5 khz. The ship shall, in addition, be capable of transmitting and receiving general radiocommunications using radiotelephony or direct-printing telegraphy by either:

A HF radio installation operating on working frequencies in the (marine) bands between 1,605 khz and 27,500 khz. (This requirement is normally fulfilled by the MF equipment referred to earlier - all GMDSS MF transceivers also cover HF) OR An Inmarsat ship station. Typical GMDSS A2 ship station Radio equipment - Sea areas A1, A2 and A3 These vessels have two options to satisfy their GMDSS requirements. The options allow a vessel to choose from the primary method to be used for ship-shore alerting ; Every ship engaged on voyages beyond sea areas A1 and A2, but remaining within sea area A3 shall be provided with the minimum equipment specified previously, plus either: An Inmarsat C ship earth station : An MF radio installation and 2187.5 khz DSC watchkeeping receiver (can be the same one as required for A2); OR An MF/HF radio installation capable of transmitting and receiving on all distress and safety frequencies in the (marine) bands between 1,605 khz and 27,500 khz using DSC, radiotelephony and NBDP. An MF/HF DSC watchkeeping receiver capable of maintaining DSC watch on 2,187.5 khz, 8,414.5 khz and on at least one of the distress and safety DSC frequencies 4,207.5 khz, 6,312 khz, 12,577 khz or 16,804.5 khz; at any time, it shall be possible to select any of these DSC distress and safety frequencies AND

Ships shall be capable of transmitting and receiving general radiocommunications using radiotelephony or direct-printing telegraphy by an MF/HF radio installation operating on working frequencies in the (marine) bands between 1,605 khz and 27,500 khz. This requirement is normally fulfilled by the addition of this capability in the MF/HF equipment referred to earlier - there is no MF only equipment made. Typical GMDSS A3 ship station Radio equipment - Sea areas Al, A2, A3 and A4 In addition to carrying the equipment listed previously, every ship engaged on voyages in all sea areas shall be provided with: An MF/HF radio installation as described earlier An MF/HF DSC watchkeeping receiver as described earlier In addition, ships shall be capable of transmitting and receiving general radiocommunications using radiotelephony or direct-printing telegraphy by an MF/HF radio installation as described earlier. Typical GMDSS A4 ship station

Confused? Wait, there's more..! Means of ensuring availability of ship station equipment Regulation 15 of the SOLAS GMDSS regulations defines 3 methods to ensure availability of GMDSS equipment at sea; At sea electronic maintenance, requiring the carriage of a qualified radio/electronic officer (holding a GMDSS First or Second class Radio-Electronics Certificate) and adequate spares and manuals; Duplication of certain equipment; or Shore based maintenance Ships engaged on voyages in sea areas A1 and A2 are required to use at least one of the three maintenance methods outlined above, or a combination as may be approved by their administration. Ships engaged on voyages in sea areas A3 and A4 are required to use at least two of the methods outlined above. And of course what all that means is that 99% of A3 GMDSS ships, along with probably 100% of A1 and A2 GMDSS ships do not opt for at sea maintenance - they either duplicate the equipment and use shore based maintenance (for A3 ships), or use shore based maintenance only (A1 and A2 ships). Equipment to be duplicated for area A3 vessels GMDSS ships operating in A3 areas are required to provide the following duplicated equipment; Two complete VHF installations (including DSC), and either; Two complete Inmarsat C systems and one MF radio system, or; One complete Inmarsat C system and one complete MF/HF radio system (including a scanning DSC receiver and NBDP equipment). Many GMDSS ships opt for the latter option (1 Inmarsat C and one MF/HF DSC system), on cost grounds. Unfortunately, this has proven to be one of the underlying causes of the present extremely high false alerting rate on some GMDSS systems. Power supply requirements GMDSS equipment is required to be powered from three sources of supply: ship's normal alternators/generators;

ship's emergency alternator/generator (if fitted); and a dedicated radio battery supply. The batteries are required to have a capacity to power the equipment for 1 hour on ships with an emergency generator, and 6 hours on ships not fitted with an emergency generator. The batteries must be charged by an automatic charger, which is also required to be powered from the main and emergency generators. Changeover from AC to battery supply must be automatic, and effected in such a way that any any data held by the equipment is not corrupted (ie: "no break"). Operator qualifications There are a number of different types of GMDSS qualifications, as follows: First Class Radio-Electronic Certificate; Second Class Radio-Electronic Certificate; and GMDSS General Operator's Certificate The First and Second Radio-Electronic Certificates are diploma and associate diploma level technical qualifications. They are designed for Ship's Radio-Electronic Officers, who sail on GMDSS ships which use the option of at-sea electronic maintenance. The GMDSS General Operator's Certificate is a non-technical operator qualification, designed for Navigating Officers. The GMDSS General Operator's Certificate is normally awarded after a ten day course and examination.