Disabling DSC

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It surprises me that some people seem to think that DSC is just for emergency calling. It's Digital Selective Calling. As in I can selectively call my fishing or cruising partner, or the Coast Guard, directly. Like a phone. Without hailing and tying up 16. From what I read here about radio ettiquette this would be something I think people would embrace rather than reject. Plus you can request position updates that don't even require a person to respond. We use it frequently and appreciate it. I realize that doesn't address the OPs alarm issue. I think that's more radio specific.
 
Had problems with DSC alarms going off. Got a new to me trawler and found the previous owner never registered or entered a MMSI number. So I have no issues.
Yeh!
 
Read the manual...

Page 32 I think, Benthic pointed it out too...

I Receiving DSC calls
D Receiving a Distress call
While monitoring Channel 70 and a distress call is received: ➥ The emergency alarm sounds for 2 minutes after receiving the first distress call from a station.
• Push [CLR] to stop the alarm.
• After receiving a second (or repeated) distress call from the same station, the alarm sounds for 1 sec......

On my Standard Horizon, it is any soft key to silence, the ICOM is the clear button.

The new ICOM radios just installed on the assistance towboat do not have MMSI programmed in so the alarm sounds when you turn them on, drove me nuts till I figured you had to hit CLR twice as it td you something the first git, tbe second silenced tbe alarm.

I will bet that will work on the 602 also.
 
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Yes, punching any button does silence the alarm. The problem is the alarm. It would have been SO SIMPLE for them to allow this to be something where the volume could be adjusted. Instead, they assume that you are 500 yards away and need to be able to hear it because you are attending a Black Sabbath concert. Insane.

What bothers me is that this is an important safety feature, and my only defense against bleeding ear drums is turning the VHF off. So, if I could disable the unit's ability to process the DSC signal, that is fine with me.

Could it be this simple ....( link to online manual: file:///C:/Users/Greg/Downloads/M604A_Instruct.pdf)


Yep, the CLEAR button is probably what I meant...

The alert volume is startling, but FWIW when we're up on plane it takes that kind of volume to overcome engine and water/wave/wind noise.

I'm usually more focused on receiving weather alerts, equally loud.

I've just gotten used to pushing the "make it stop" button quickly, I guess -- now that Benthic reminded me which button that is. :)

For the discussion about using DSC to call other vessels, get position reports, etc... yep, sounds good on paper, but we've never done that. I don't know many boaters with MMSIs, or at least don't know what their MMSI is... and wouldn't usually be inclined to go through the process in advance of adding another boat to the DSC "buddy list"... and wouldn't often be inclined to call anyone else anyway. When we know a couple of our buds are out fishing at the same time as us, we just use the cell phones for that; usually no need to clutter up VHF. But we only fish in mid-April to mid-May, and the rest of the time we don't go out of our way to talk with anyone else.

-Chris
 
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Agree the vast majority of boaters dont use DSC here in the states.

DSC was supposedly up and running in Europe almost a decade before the US. Anyone have experience using it there?

If buddy boating or just in a really radio congested area it might be the ticket to learn how to, especially if cel reception is bad.

I have read of people using it and loving it once used to it, but it is a small number of people in comparison to all boaters.

Probably like features on all electronic gadgets these days, they are there because it is easy to incorporate into the design (and DSC was designed for other things besides just alerting people) more than z demand for them.

So some people jump on them while others never see the need.

Probably the best thing for thd max decibel alarm would be an ambient noise sensor like motorcycle radios have.
 
If you look at the history of DSC, and the rules developed requiring its deployment on all radios you won't find anything about buddy boating communication. It was all about adherence to the SOLAS Convention, and I suspect the volume of the alarm and disallowance of user control over that volume is a regulatory requirement because it certainly makes no sense from a user perspective.

DSC ship to ship backdoor communication capability looks like a "feature" layered over a federal requirement and for the vast majority of us is a feature we will never use, need to use or want to use. That's what cell phones are for and if you are in an area without cell phone coverage, my guess is that channel 16 is not exactly overflowing with traffic.

For some reason this reminds me of when the U.S. Post Office had the light go off over their heads that email would rather seriously impact the use of snail mail. Their bureaucratic solution? Why you would email the United States Post Office, they would print the email, stuff it in an envelop and deliver in a couple of days to the recipient. Brilliant. I think the DSC system was developed by the folks at the Post Office.
 
I had a coffee snort experience due to an emergency DSC transmission this trip. It happens so rarely that it always takes a while to figure out what is going on and I stab at the buttons until the alarm goes off.

I think the implementation by the manufacturers could be improved. I think it is a valuable feature however.

I have rarely used DSC to contact another boat. I don't even remember how it is done. I would need to review the manual. I think that if I was buddy boating, it would be a nice feature as it would make it quick and East to contact them.

This trip were where being shadowed by two boats "Cheshire Cat" and "Jamie". There were obviously traveling together and were calling each other back and forth a LOT. Their radio technique was immaculate, but we must have heard this every 30 minutes for days on end while they were under way.

'CHESHIRE CAT", "CHESHIRE CAT", "CHESHIRE CAT", this is "JAMIE", "JAMIE", "JAMIE", over.

"CHESHIRE CAT" this is "JAMIE", over

"09?

"09."

This got very, very tiresome after a week and a half. Nothing that they did wrong but channel 16 is busy enough in this water this time of year. How much better if they had used DSC to keep all the hailing off of channel 16?
 
I had a coffee snort experience due to an emergency DSC transmission this trip. It happens so rarely that it always takes a while to figure out what is going on and I stab at the buttons until the alarm goes off.

I think the implementation by the manufacturers could be improved. I think it is a valuable feature however.

I have rarely used DSC to contact another boat. I don't even remember how it is done. I would need to review the manual. I think that if I was buddy boating, it would be a nice feature as it would make it quick and East to contact them.

This trip were where being shadowed by two boats "Cheshire Cat" and "Jamie". There were obviously traveling together and were calling each other back and forth a LOT. Their radio technique was immaculate, but we must have heard this every 30 minutes for days on end while they were under way.

'CHESHIRE CAT", "CHESHIRE CAT", "CHESHIRE CAT", this is "JAMIE", "JAMIE", "JAMIE", over.

"CHESHIRE CAT" this is "JAMIE", over

"09?

"09."

This got very, very tiresome after a week and a half. Nothing that they did wrong but channel 16 is busy enough in this water this time of year. How much better if they had used DSC to keep all the hailing off of channel 16?

This is one of those reasons to read the manual and learn how to monitor a second channel. "Cheshire Cat" vessel "Jamie" on 09. Kind of like commercial bridge to bridge traffic on 13. No need to keep restarting on 16.

Ted
 
This is one of those reasons to read the manual and learn how to monitor a second channel. "Cheshire Cat" vessel "Jamie" on 09. Kind of like commercial bridge to bridge traffic on 13. No need to keep restarting on 16.

Ted

Precisely. The problem is not with the concept of DSC. The problem is not allowing the devices to accommodate the difference between a boater going along on plane at 25 knots needed to hear an alarm and someone standing 3 feet away from the speaker. This is just completely stupid engineering and the fact that it is the way they all work suggests that this is another example of bureaucratic, design by committee functionality.
 
DSC is much broader of a feature than the distress button
..it is supposed to enhance tbe concept of radio telephone.

And yes the distress alarm might be different from routine DSC calls, if you were broadcasting a MAYDAY, wouldn't you wan it to be more noticeable?

The DSC panic button is a great feature, but Delfin's experience is likely to lead to people disabling that which is unfortunate.

But using DSC as a way to place routine calls strikes me as an utter failure. It's 10x, no 100x more complicated to call a boat via DSC as compared to "boat, boat, boat, this is other boat on 16". At least half of my VHF manual is about DSC calling, which itself is an indication of total failure.

Looking up another boat's MMSI, entering it into the VHF, then going through the call, accept, etc steps to place a call is simply never going to happen.

Clicking on an AIS boat icon and picking "call boat" might happen, if only it worked. I have yet to hear of any VHF, chart plotter combination that actually will do that, though I suppose they must exist somewhere.

Setting aside the DSC panic button, which as said earlier, I really like, I think DSC is second only to NMEA 2000 in the magnitude of it's failure. And DSC is second only because it can be totally ignored and is hence benign, when N2K will actively screw you up if you let it.

Ah, I feel much better after venting....
 
Clicking on an AIS boat icon and picking "call boat" might happen, if only it worked. I have yet to hear of any VHF, chart plotter combination that actually will do that, though I suppose they must exist somewhere.

I have a Garmin VHF200 (N2K) radio, GPSMAP 7212 and 740 plotters and a Si-Tex MDA-1 Class B AIS and it all works perfectly. Very handy in the Galveston Ship Channel and Gulf ICW working with commercial traffic.

Conversely, using DSC to contact pleasure boats is a non-starter IMHO. Just too complicated.
 
This is one of those reasons to read the manual and learn how to monitor a second channel. "Cheshire Cat" vessel "Jamie" on 09. Kind of like commercial bridge to bridge traffic on 13. No need to keep restarting on 16.



Ted



Yup, another good option. I've been dual monitoring for the last 5 hours, vessel traffic and 16. Works great.

I still think for buddy boating, it has some real advantages.
 

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