Marine electronics
The term marine electronics is used for areas such as
Marine electronics devices are
- Chartplotter
- Marine VHF radio
- Autopilot/Self-steering gear
- Fishfinder/Sonar
- Radar
- GPS
- Electronic compass
- Satellite television
- Marine fuel management
Communication
The electronics devices communicate by using a protocol defined by NMEA. NMEA has two standards available
NMEA 0183 is based on a serial communication network. NMEA 2000 is a Controller-area network based technology.
In recent years, the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) has created a new standards suite for "Digital interfaces for navigational equipment within a ship". This is known as IEC 61162 and included NMEA 0183, NMEA 2000 and LWE.
Additionally, different suppliers of marine electronics have their own communications protocol
- Simrad has SimNet
- B&G has FastNet
- Raymarine has SeaTalk
- Furuno has NavNet
- Stowe has Dataline
- Nexus has FDX
- Sea~Data has SDML (XML markup language)
Companies
The international companies selling marine electronics for ships and yachts alphabetically are
- Airmar
- Furuno
- Marine Electronics Center
- Maretron
- Onwa Marine Electronics
- Raymarine Marine Electronics
- Seiwa Marine Electronics
- Simrad in Kongsberg Maritime
- Simrad Yachting in Navico
- Stowe Marine
- Tinley Electronics
Companies developing marine electronics products are
- Egersund Marine Electronics
- Kongsberg Maritime
- Seiwa Marine Electronics
- Navico