The Inmarsat C maritime mobile satellite system has an inherent capability, known as
Virtually all navigatable waters of the world are covered by Inmarsat satellites. Each satellite transmits EGC traffic on a designated channel at 1.5 GHz. Any ship sailing within the coverage area of an Inmarsat satellite will be able to receive all SafetyNET messages broadcast over this channel by that satellite. All Inmarsat C maritime ship stations can monitor the EGC channel. The EGC channel can also be monitored by dedicated receive-only equipment installed separately or as part of an Inmarsat A station.
The International Maritime Organization has announced that by June 1998, broadcasts of navigational and meteorological information will be made for every NAV/MET Area of the globe. Search and Rescue information is also broadcast in most areas.
Inmarsat C SafetyNET services currently include:
United States SafetyNET broadcasts include:
Ships located outside a circular or rectangular area will not receive a message
addressed to these areas, provided the Inmarsat C satellite terminal is connected to a GPS
or similar navigational receiver, or the ship's position has been recently updated
manually. If the terminal is not connected to a navigational receiver, then it will
receive
The printing of messages already received correctly is automatically suppressed.
SafetyNET messages include a special header consisting of five "C" codes:
The National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) maintains the SafetyNET Users Handbook on the Inmarsat Homepage, and is available at no charge. The address is http://safety.inmarsat.com/snet.pdf
Most Inmarsat C terminals will not receive a safety broadcast if it is transmitting a message, or if it is tuned to an Inmarsat ocean region not used for safety broadcasts in the area travelled. Most SafetyNET messages are rebroadcast after 6 minutes, to give a transmitting terminal time to receive missed messages. Lists of SafetyNET broadcast schedules and areas have been published by the JOINT WMO/IOC COMMISSION FOR OCEANOGRAPHY AND MARINE METEOROLOGY to assist ship operators tune Inmarsat C terminals to the proper Inmarsat ocean region.
Although reception of SafetyNET traffic is automatic, the shipboard operator must set up the receiver properly at the start of the voyage:
The modulation rate of the broadcast channel is 1200 bits per second. Forward error correction is applied to this, creating an effective information transfer of 600 bits per second (rate 1/2 convolutional coding with interleaving is used to disperse error bursts which arise when deep fades are present). This ensures that there is a high probability of receiving a message correctly at the first transmission, irrespective of the atmospheric conditions or the ship's position within the satellite coverage.
A copy of the latest International SafetyNET Users Manual Issue is available from the Inmarsat Support Page. Click on Tools. The Handbook is located near the bottom of the left hand column.
For further information on the International SafetyNET Service, contact:
The ChairmanDownload Worldwide SafetyNET Broadcast Status Chart (Excel 5 - 12.8kb file)