| DIGITAL
SELECTIVE CALLING
The U.S. Coast Guard offers MF/HF radiotelephone service to mariners
as part of the Global Maritime Distress and
Safety System. This service, called digital selective calling
(DSC), allows mariners to instantly send an automatically formatted
distress alert to the Coast Guard or other rescue authority anywhere
in the world. Digital selective calling also allows mariners to
initiate or receive distress, urgency, safety and routine radiotelephone
calls to or from any similarly equipped vessel or shore station,
without requiring either party to be near a radio loudspeaker. DSC
acts like the dial and bell of a telephone, allowing you to "direct
dial" and "ring" other radios, or allow others to "ring" you, without
having to listen to a speaker. New VHF and HF radiotelephones have
DSC capability.
History
On February 1, 1999, the Safety of Life at Sea (SOLAS) Convention,
a treaty document, required all passenger ships and most other ships
300 grt and larger on international voyages, including all cargo
ships, to carry DSC- equipped radios. Ships were allowed to turn
off their 2182 kHz radio listening watch on that date. The International
Maritime Organization has postponed indefinitely plans to suspend
this VHF watch on ships. It had originally planned to suspend
this watch on February 1, 2005.
Because of the safety problems that lack of communications interoperability
would cause between SOLAS-regulated vessels (mostly cargo ships)
and other vessels (recreational boaters, commercial fishing vessels,
etc.), the Coast Guard petitioned the Federal Communications Commission
in 1992 to require all marine radios made or sold in the U.S. have
a DSC capability. The Coast Guard had also asked the Radio
Technical Commission for Maritime Services (RTCM), a non-profit
professional organization, to develop a standard which would allow
incorporation of DSC in a marine radio without affecting the low-end
market price of that radio. The FCC solicited comments on that petition
in 1992 and 1993, and prepared a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on
that and other maritime radiocommunications matters in early 1994.
The FCC requested comments concerning that rulemaking from May to
November 1995. On 27 June 1997, the FCC adopted a Report and
Order requiring radios type accepted on or after 17 June 1999 to
include this minimum DSC capability.
Recommendations On Digital Selective Calling (DSC) Test Calls
To Coast Stations
The International Telecommunications Union Sector for Radiocommunications
has indicated that excessive test calls on MF/HF DSC distress and
safety frequencies are overloading the system to the point where
interference to distress and safety calls has become a cause for
concern.. To minimize possible interference, live testing on DSC
distress and safety frequencies with coast stations should be limited
to once a week as recommended by the International
Maritime Organization
USCG Response Policy
USCG Response Policy for MF/HF Digital Selective
Calling is outlined in this PDF document.
US Coast Guard DSC-Equipped Shore Stations
| Station |
Type |
Remote Site |
MMSI |
| CAMSLANT Chesapeake VA |
MF/HF |
-- |
003669995 |
| COMMSTA Boston MA |
MF/HF |
Remoted to CAMSLANT
|
003669991 |
| COMMSTA Miami FL |
MF/HF |
Remoted to CAMSLANT
|
003669997 |
| COMMSTA Belle Chase LA |
MF/HF |
Remoted to CAMSLANT
|
003669998 |
| CAMSPAC Pt Reyes CA |
MF/HF |
-- |
003669990 |
| COMMSTA Honolulu HI |
MF/HF |
Remoted to CAMSPAC
|
003669993 |
| COMMSTA Kodiak AK |
MF/HF |
-- |
003669899 |
Many USCG Group offices operate MF DSC on a trial basis.
The Coast Guard plans to declare a Sea Area A2 (have an operational
MF DSC service) for the Contiguous US coast and Hawaii. The US currently
does not have a declared Sea Area A2.
USCG Implementation of GMDSS Sea Area
A1 (VHF)
The USCG plan to implement GMDSS Sea Area A1 is one element of
the USCG National
Distress and Response System Modernization Project, now called
"Rescue 21", which replaces the whole USCG VHF distress system.
On 24 September 2002, Secretary of Transportation Norman Mineta
announced the award of this $612 million contract to General Dynamics
Corp.
Until this system is installed, the Coast Guard cannot reliably
receive VHF DSC distress calls.
Interconnection to a GPS Receiver
All DSC-equipped radios, and most GPS receivers, have an NMEA 0183
two-wire data interface connector. That NMEA interface allows
any model of GPS to be successfully interconnected to any model
of radio, regardless of manufacture. Although NMEA has no
standard for the type of connector used, many if not most DSC and
GPS receiver manufactures use bare wire connections. These wires
are simply connected between the radio and the GPS by twisting the
wires (some people solder) and tape (some people use waterproof
heat shrink tubing). Note also that NMEA 0183 and IEC 61162-1
data interfaces are identical.
The Coast Guard urges, in the strongest terms possible, that
you take the time to interconnect your GPS and DSC-equipped radio.
Doing so may save your life in a distress situation!
Distress Relays
The single largest operational problem of the U.S. Coast Guard
concerning DSC had been responding to the large number of MF/HF
DSC distress relays being sent by ships. ITU regulations require
each relay to be individually acknowledged. The Coast Guard
treats each distress alert relay as if it were a separate distress.
Worse, certain radios insert the identity of a ship sending a relay,
rather than a ship sending a distress, into the menu of a relay
message, and ship operators are transmitting this relay falsely
identifying the ship in distress to Coast Guard rescue coordination
centers. The USCG requested that vessels not
relay any DSC distress message which has already been acknowledged.
If you do relay a distress message, make sure the identity of the
vessel in distress is correct, and send the relay to a USCG radio
station using an identity such as 003669999, rather than sending
it to all ships.
Since this problem was identified, radio operators have cooperated
to reduce the number of relays transmitted. Consequently,
this is far less of a problem now.
If we were to identify the single largest operational problem of
the U.S. Coast Guard concerning DSC today, it would likely be the
lack of follow-up voice communications after transmission of a DSC
call.
Other DSC problems and plans to correct
them
Continuing DSC problems include:
- the lack of follow-up voice comms after transmission of a DSC
call, particularly a distress call
- Unnecessary and frequent alarms
- Distress alerts without accurate location information
- Distress alerts with unregistered MMSI identification
- Limited use of DSC for routine communications
- Inconsistent and illogical software menu defaults
- Alarms disrupting ongoing radiocommunications
In 2001 the International Telecommunications Union, in addressing
these problems, began a major update to their DSC standard Rec ITU-R
M.493 to address these problems. Changeswere adopted in e
and published in early 2004. The Safety of Life at Sea Convention
now requires radios be interconnected to electronic position fixing
devices (e.g. GPS receivers). Radios meeting these new requirements
should show significant improvement over earlier models, and many
problems listed above should no longer occur. Of course, new
radios will be designed to be fully interoperable with older radios.
IMO Flowcharts
The International Maritime Organization Communications and Search
& Rescue Subcommittee released COMSAR Circular 25 of 15
March 2001, which includes simplified flowcharts on the actions
a person on a ship should perform on receipt of a distress alert
using DSC-equipped radios. The documents is in Acrobat PDF
format.
DSC Forum
You may sign up for the free GMDSS
email list and participate in the discussion forum sponsored
by Densham and Associates, Australia. The Navigation Center nor
the U.S. Coast Guard endorses this site; it mentioned for the reference
purposes only.
Vessel tracking and position fixing
The new Universal Shipborne Automatic
Identification System will be backwards compatible to DSC, allowing
countries having GMDSS A1 areas to establish AIS operating frequencies,
and additionally identify and track vessels equipped with AIS. More
importantly the same nine digit identity (MMSI) used in DSC for
calling is used by the AIS in identifying vessels.
Classes of Digital Selective Calling
The DSC protocol is defined by ITU-R Recommendation M.493 (series),
available from the International
Telecommunications Union in Geneva, Switzerland. DSC operation
is defined by ITU-R Recommendation M.541 (series).
Class A:
All DSC options provided. Required on MF/HF and VHF radios used
by SOLAS-regulated ships. Class A includes polling and vessel tracking,
data, and numerous other functions in addition to voice.
Class B:
Required on VHF and MF radios used by SOLAS-regulated ships, though
most such radios in fact meet Class A. Class B required capabilities
include:
- Distress call
- All-ships call
- Individual station call
- Semi-automatic/automatic service call
- Use of distress, urgency, safety and routine priorities
- Nature of distress
- Distress coordinates
- Time for last (distress) position update
- Type of subsequent communications
- Distress relay
- Distress acknowledgment
- Test call (for MF/HF only)
- Radio frequency or channel
- Display
- Receive geographical area calls
- Alarm
- Optional means for canceling a distress alert
Class C:
Only capable of transmitting a distress alert. No longer allowed
by the ITU or FCC.
Class D:
Minimum DSC capability for VHF marine radios carried by recreational
boaters, commercial fishing vessels, and other non-SOLAS regulated
vessels. Class D required capabilities include:
- Distress call
- All-ships call
- Individual station call
- Use of distress, urgency, safety and routine priorities
- Nature of distress
- Distress coordinates
- Time for last (distress) position update
- Type of subsequent communications
- Radio VHF channel
- Display
- Receive distress relay and distress acknowledgment calls
- Alarm
Class E:
Minimum DSC capability for HF marine radios carried by recreational
boaters, commercial fishing vessels, and other non-SOLAS regulated
vessels. Class E required capabilities include:
- Distress call
- All-ships call
- Individual station call
- Use of distress, urgency, safety and routine priorities
- Nature of distress
- Distress coordinates
- Time for last (distress) position update
- Type of subsequent communications
- Radio channel or frequency
- Display
- Receive distress relay and distress acknowledgment calls
- Alarm
RTCM SC101
RTCM Recommended Minimum Standard for DSC, Version 1.0, 10 Aug
1995, RTCM Paper 56-95/SC101-STD. Applies to VHF and to MF/HF. This
standard is not generally recognized outside of the U.S. and should
be replaced soon by the ITU Class D and E. SC101 required
capabilities include:
- Distress call
- All-ships call
- Individual station call
- Use of distress and routine priorities
- Use of safety priority (MF/HF only)
- Distress coordinates
- Time for last (distress) position update
- Acknowledgment or unable to comply response
- Receive distress relay and distress acknowledgment calls
- Receive Geographical area calls
- Test call (MF/HF only)
- Alarm
ITU-R Rec. M.825-3:
DSC transponder system for Vessel Traffic Services or ship- to-ship
interrogation and identification. Rec. M.825 is superceded
by the Universal Shipborne Automatic Identification System.
ITU-R Rec. M.821:
Optional expansion to DSC protocol. Perhaps the most important
M.821 expansion, now incorporated in most new DSC-equipped radios,
improves the accuracy of distress position from 1 mile to the accuracy
of your interconnected GPS receiver (about 13 meters).
More information concerning DSC
|