All of work with the engine related installation was completed by the people that sold me the motor. My job is to rewire the boat for everything else. That includes running lights, loud Hailer, radios, depth finder, and everything else not related to the motor. That job includes drilling the hall, installing antennas, and putting in transmission wires and electrical blocks, etc.
Tomorrow I have to go get some Marine plywood and reinforce certain sections of the interior to use mounting surfaces. The boat has a little storage deck under the bow, and it is my intention to mount some of the electronics on board which I will put under there. Not only will that provide a fine surface, but it will also provide a removable device with all electronics on it for security during storage. The chart plotter is fairly heavy so that reinforcement will also guard against damage during operation.
Continued Wednesday morning:
Yesterday as I indicated, I picked up a Hand Mike/Speaker for my new VHF. I monitored it all during my trip to Seattle, while I was there and then back of North with volume reasonably up, and squelch almost off. There was nothing to hear when in the scan mode except for one information call from Coast Guard/Seattle.
For a weekday, the traffic was essentially nil. I can see why in an attempt to boost user ship they have waived the domestic requirement for a FCC license. Traffic wasn't 1% of what it was years ago when I was a more active boater.
Today, I have two dentist appointments and then back on the boat. Will monitor VHF again on trip to Bellingham. With all that I've read recently regarding VHF my first impression is that currently the thing is a vast wasteland hardly being used. I can see why when we used channel 69 for club communications at 1 W we had no other traffic on a channel. Now admittedly, the handheld has a 0db gain antenna, but Coast Guard Seattle and traffic control channels certainly don't, nor do ship traffic in the local traffic control zones. Yet, there was nothing on the radio. I guess I will have to wait until I get the AIS receiver working on a radio before I learn more.
Tomorrow I have to go get some Marine plywood and reinforce certain sections of the interior to use mounting surfaces. The boat has a little storage deck under the bow, and it is my intention to mount some of the electronics on board which I will put under there. Not only will that provide a fine surface, but it will also provide a removable device with all electronics on it for security during storage. The chart plotter is fairly heavy so that reinforcement will also guard against damage during operation.
Continued Wednesday morning:
Yesterday as I indicated, I picked up a Hand Mike/Speaker for my new VHF. I monitored it all during my trip to Seattle, while I was there and then back of North with volume reasonably up, and squelch almost off. There was nothing to hear when in the scan mode except for one information call from Coast Guard/Seattle.
For a weekday, the traffic was essentially nil. I can see why in an attempt to boost user ship they have waived the domestic requirement for a FCC license. Traffic wasn't 1% of what it was years ago when I was a more active boater.
Today, I have two dentist appointments and then back on the boat. Will monitor VHF again on trip to Bellingham. With all that I've read recently regarding VHF my first impression is that currently the thing is a vast wasteland hardly being used. I can see why when we used channel 69 for club communications at 1 W we had no other traffic on a channel. Now admittedly, the handheld has a 0db gain antenna, but Coast Guard Seattle and traffic control channels certainly don't, nor do ship traffic in the local traffic control zones. Yet, there was nothing on the radio. I guess I will have to wait until I get the AIS receiver working on a radio before I learn more.
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