Automatic Identification System

It’s like GPS + radio + boat ID all combined into one system.

Think of AIS as “boat tracking for boats.”

Boats with AIS constantly broadcast:

  • Their position
  • Their speed
  • Their direction
  • Their boat name
  • Their MMSI number
  • Their boat type
  • Collision-avoidance data

Your Simrad takes that information and plots other boats on your map, just like a live marine radar — except all via radio data.

Two Types of AIS Equipment

There are only 2 types:

1. AIS Receiver (see boats)

  • You can see other AIS boats on your Simrad
  • You do NOT show up on their screens
  • No MMSI needed for this

2. AIS Transponder (see + be seen)

  • You see other AIS boats
  • Other boats AND the Coast Guard can see you
  • Requires an MMSI programmed into it
  • Requires an antenna

Most people on the ICW eventually get a Class B AIS transponder so they are visible in fog, at night, and around big ships.

How AIS Works With Simrad

Your Simrad GO series fully supports AIS.

When AIS data comes in:

  • Boats show up as icons on your chart
  • You can tap them to see name, speed, direction
  • The system warns you if collision risk exists (CPA/TCPA alarms)
  • Targets display just like radar overlays

AIS is one of the most important safety upgrades you can add, especially on the narrow, winding ICW.


How AIS Works With Your VHF Radio

Some VHF radios have AIS receivers built in (example: Standard Horizon GX2400, Icom M510 with add-on, Simrad RS40-B model).

These radios can:

  • Receive AIS targets
  • Output them to your Simrad over NMEA 2000
  • Show AIS targets on the VHF’s own tiny screen

Other VHF radios do not include AIS.
Many people choose:

Option A: VHF with built-in AIS
Option B: Separate AIS transponder box
Option C: Both

Your boat can use either setup.


Do you need AIS on the NC ICW?

Short answer: It’s extremely helpful.
Here’s why:

  • You see barges, ferries, tugs around bends
  • Other boats (especially big ones) can see YOU
  • Great for nighttime or fog
  • Helps the Coast Guard locate you faster
  • Very helpful if you become a charter captain

Even if you get just a receiver, you’ll see traffic around you.
If you get a transponder, tugs and commercial vessels will see you — huge safety boost.


What You Need to Add AIS to Your Boat

Here is the simplest breakdown:

Option 1: VHF radio with AIS built in

(cheapest, simplest wiring)

Examples:

  • Standard Horizon GX2400 (great and inexpensive)
  • Simrad RS40-B (includes AIS transponder)
  • Icom M510 + AIS add-on

Pros:

  • One device does VHF + DSC + AIS
  • Only one antenna needed
  • Easy install to NMEA 2000 → Simrad auto-detects it

Cons:

  • Not all models include broadcasting (some receive only)

Option 2: AIS Transponder Box

(ideal if you want other boats to see you)

Examples:

  • Simrad NAIS-500
  • Vesper Cortex (high-end)
  • Vesper XB-6000

Pros:

  • Best AIS performance
  • Full broadcast capabilities
  • Works with any VHF radio

Cons:

  • Slightly more wiring
  • Needs dedicated AIS antenna or splitter

What You’d Need to Install (Very Simple)

For a transponder setup:

  1. AIS transponder unit
  2. Antenna or antenna splitter
  3. NMEA 2000 cable to your Simrad
  4. MMSI programmed into AIS
  5. (Optional) GPS antenna (some units need it; some use NMEA 2000 GPS)

For a VHF with AIS built in:

  1. The VHF radio
  2. Plug into NMEA 2000 backbone
  3. Plug into power
  4. (Optional) Program MMSI (only if it’s a transponder)

Your Simrad will immediately show AIS boats once connected.


Cost Breakdown

Approximate:

  • AIS Receiver VHF: $250–$350
  • AIS Transponder VHF: $500–$700
  • AIS Transponder Box: $600–$900
  • Antenna splitter: $100–$200

You can start inexpensive and upgrade later.


Which Setup Is Best for YOU?

Based on:

  • You have a Simrad GO
  • You boat in the NC ICW
  • You want to eventually become a captain
  • You want safety for your family

The best setup is:

Simrad RS40-B (includes DSC + VHF + AIS transponder)

OR

Standard Horizon GX2400 (AIS receiver + DSC) if you only want to see boats and stay cheap.

Let me know your:

  • Budget
  • Whether you want to see boats only or also be seen
  • Whether you want AIS in the radio or a separate unit