Closest Point of Approach.

It’s one of the key safety features you get when your Simrad GO9 receives AIS data (from an RS40 or RS40-B).


What CPA Actually Means

CPA tells you how close another vessel will come to you if both of you continue on your current course and speed.

Example:

  • A ship is 2 miles away
  • Your GO9 shows CPA 0.25 NM
  • That means the ship will pass within a quarter mile of you
  • Your GO9 will also show TCPA (Time to CPA) – how long until that happens

👍 Why CPA matters

CPA helps you quickly determine if another vessel is a collision risk.

  • High CPA (1 NM, 2 NM, 5 NM)
    → Safe. No action needed.
  • Low CPA (0.1 NM, 0.2 NM)
    → Possible collision or very close pass.
  • TCPA (Time to CPA) tells you how soon that close approach will happen.

Your Simrad can also alarm:

  • CPA alarm – “Hey, this guy is going to get too close to you.”
  • TCPA alarm – “He will get close in X minutes.”

This is extremely useful in:

  • Fog
  • Night
  • Busy ICW channels
  • Offshore with big fast ships
  • When someone is on a collision course but you don’t notice it visually

🚤 What you need for CPA to work

You need AIS data on your GO9:

  • RS40 → AIS receiver → you see their position, speed, CPA
  • RS40-B → AIS transceiver → you see them & they see you
  • RS20S → No AIS → no CPA information

📌 Simple definition

CPA = The closest distance another boat will come to you if neither of you change course or speed.