Monday, 11 May 2026

Getting Started with AIS: Track Ships from Your Shack with a RTL-SDR

The Automatic Identification System (AIS) is a VHF radio-based collision-avoidance protocol that virtually every commercial, passenger, and large recreational vessel in the world is required to carry. Since 2004, the International Maritime Organization (IMO) has mandated AIS transponders on all ships of 300 GT or more engaged in international voyages, all cargo ships of 500 GT or more on domestic routes, and all passenger ships regardless of size.

AIS featured image

Every few seconds — sometimes as often as every two seconds when a vessel is manoeuvring — its AIS transponder transmits a compact digital burst on one of two dedicated VHF channels: 161.975 MHz (Channel 87B) and 162.025 MHz (Channel 88B). That burst contains a rich data payload: MMSI number (a unique vessel ID), ship name, call sign, IMO number, vessel type, dimensions, draught, destination, navigational status, GPS position, course over ground, speed over ground, rate of turn, and more.


Getting Started with AIS: Track Ships from Your Shack with a RTL-SDR

Complete Guide to Budget Software Defined Radio : From $15 Dongles to Serious HF Receivers

 Software Defined Radios have quietly rewritten the rules of radio listening. What once demanded a shelf full of dedicated hardware — separate receivers for HF, VHF, UHF, satellite — now fits into a USB dongle the size of your thumb. For hobbyists and shortwave listeners working on a tight budget, that shift is nothing short of revolutionary. This guide covers the full landscape of affordable SDRs: what to buy at each price point, which software tools matter, and how to avoid the traps that catch most beginners.