NAVTEX
MARITIME SAFETY BROADCASTS
SPECIAL NAVTEX NOTICE
NAVTEX in the United States
The International Maritime Organization has designated NAVTEX as
the primary means for transmitting coastal urgent marine safety
information to ships worldwide. In the United States, NAVTEX is
broadcast from Coast Guard facilities in Cape Cod, Chesapeake VA,
Savannah GA, Miami FL, New Orleans LA, San Juan PR, Cambria CA,
Pt. Reyes CA, Astoria OR, Kodiak AK, Honolulu HI, and Guam. The
Coast Guard began operating NAVTEX from Boston in 1983.
NAVTEX coverage is reasonably continuous in the east, west and
Gulf coasts of the United States, as well the area around Kodiak
Alaska, Guam and Puerto Rico. The U.S. has no coverage in the Great
Lakes, though coverage of much of the Lakes is provided by the Canadian
Coast Guard. Since the U.S. Coast Guard originally only installed
NAVTEX at sites where Morse telegraphy transmissions were made previously,
propagation analyses show some coverage gaps, particularly in the
southeast United States, Alaska, and Guam. NAVTEX broadcasts from
Adak were permanently terminated in December 1996 due to closure
of the Naval facility there.
NAVTEX Predicted Coverage in the U.S.
These charts will be updated as changes occur.
NAVTEX Message Selection
Every NAVTEX message is preceded by a four character header B(1)B(2)B(3)B(4).
B(1) is an alpha character identifying the station,
and B(2) is an alpha character used to identify the
subject of the message. Receivers use these characters to reject
messages from stations or concerning subjects of no interest to
the user. B(3)B(4) are two-digit numerics
identifying individual messages, used by receivers to keep already
received messages from being repeated. For example, a message preceded
by the characters FE01 from a U.S. NAVTEX Station
indicate that this is a weather forecast message from Boston MA.
The Transmitter Identification Character B(1)
The transmitter identification character B(1) is a
single unique letter which is allocated to each transmitter. It
is used to identify the broadcasts which are to be accepted by the
receiver and those which are to be rejected. In order to avoid erroneous
reception of transmissions from two stations having the same B(1)
character, it is necessary to ensure that such stations have a large
geographical separation. NAVTEX transmissions have a designed range
of about 400 nautical miles.
NAVTEX stations in the U.S. use the following B(1)
characters:
| B(1) Character |
Station |
Starting Time |
Call Sign |
| |
|
|
|
| F |
Cape Cod MA |
0045Z |
NMF |
| N |
Chesapeake VA |
0130 |
NMN |
| E |
Savannah GA |
0040 |
keyed by NMN |
| A |
Miami FL |
0000* |
NMA |
| R |
San Juan PR |
0200 |
NMR |
| G |
New Orleans LA |
0300 |
NMG |
| C |
Pt. Reyes CA |
0000 |
NMC |
| Q |
Cambria CA |
0045 |
NMQ |
| W |
Astoria OR |
0130 |
NMW |
J
X |
Kodiak AK** |
0300
0340 |
NOJ |
| O |
Honolulu HI |
0040 |
NMO |
| V |
Guam |
0100 |
NRV |
* - Until a planned new automatic broadcast scheduler is installed,
Miami's starting time of 0000 will be delayed approximately 5 minutes.
** - Kodiak also broadcasts safety information during time slots
previously allocated to Adak.
Subject indicator character B(2)
The subject indicator character is used by the receiver to identify
different classes of messages below. The indicator is also used
to reject messages concerning certain optional subjects which are
not required by the ship (e.g. LORAN C messages might be rejected
in a ship which is not fitted with a LORAN C receiver). Receivers
also use the B(2) character to identify messages which,
because of their importance, may not be rejected (designated by
an asterisk).
NAVTEX broadcasts use following subject indicator characters:
A = Navigational warnings *
B = Meteorological warnings *
C = Ice reports
D = Search & rescue information, and pirate warnings *
E = Meteorological forecasts
F = Pilot service messages
G = DECCA messages
H = LORAN messages
I = OMEGA messages (note OMEGA has been discontinued)
J = SATNAV messages (i.e. GPS or GLONASS)
L = Navigational warnings - additional to letter A
(Should not be rejected by the receiver)
V = Notice to Fishermen (U.S. only - currently not used)
W = Environmental (U.S. only - currently not used)
X } Special services - allocation by IMO NAVTEX Panel
Y }
Z = No message on hand
Note: The subject indicator characters B, F and G are normally
not used in the U.S. Since the National Weather Service normally
includes meteorological warnings in forecast messages, meteorological
warnings are broadcast using the subject indicator character E.
U.S. Coast Guard District Broadcast Notices to Mariners affecting
ships outside the line of demarcation, and inside the line of demarcation
in areas where deep draft vessels operate, use the subject indicator
character A.
Technical Information
All NAVTEX broadcasts are made on 518 kHz, using narrow-band direct
printing 7-unit forward error correcting (FEC or Mode B) transmission.
This type of transmission is also used by Amateur Radio service
(AMTOR). Broadcasts use 100 baud FSK modulation, with a frequency
shift of 170 Hz. The center frequency of the audio spectrum
applied to a single sideband transmitter is 1700 Hz. The receiver
6 dB bandwidth should be between 270-340 Hz.
Each character is transmitted twice. The first transmission
(DX) of a specific character is followed by the transmission of
four other characters, after which the retransmission (RX) of the
first character takes place, allowing for time-diversity reception
of 280 ms.
Fore more information, see ITU Recommendations M.540-2 and M.476-5,
available from the ITU Radiocommunications
Sector.
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