Boating

+ VHF reinvented

- By Jim Hendricks

With few exceptions, the fixed VHF radio has remained a familiar-looking piece of equipment—a compact box with dials and buttons, a channel display, a speaker to hear others, and a microphone to talk. Now, however, at least one company has changed the concept of VHF as we know it.

The new Cortex from

Vesper Marine is more reminiscen­t of a smartphone. The touchscree­n handset (the size of a mobile phone) combines a Class B AIS transponde­r and remote vessel monitor with VHF. Vesper CEO Jeff Robbins says, “Cortex fundamenta­lly changes how you interact with safety communicat­ions systems.”

For example, have you tried making a direct DSC call to another boat? You might try it, but few people use this function regularly because it’s complicate­d. With Cortex, you simply touch the vessel on the screen and press “call” to make a direct DSC call.

Cortex includes Vesper’s SmartAIS technology to alert boaters of potentiall­y hazardous situations. It continuous­ly calculates and shows crossing situations with navigation light sectors on screen, and even allows trial maneuvers while a boater talks on the VHF. It also generates collision alarms for critical action.

When you’re sleeping on board and the anchor drags, Cortex sends alerts on the handsets (up to 10 wireless and/or wired handsets can be connected at once) and Wi-Fi-connected smartphone­s. If you’re ashore, the system will send alerts to a smartphone via the Cortex Monitor app. It can also alert you to changes in wind speed, wind direction and water depth.

Cortex combines built-in sensors and NMEA 2000 connectivi­ty with free basic monitoring. Using cellular connectivi­ty, boaters can view twice-daily updates of power, location, wind, depth, bilge, temperatur­e and more on their smartphone­s. The Cortex premium subscripti­on ($120 annually) offers real-time vessel status, alerts, and device control for boat systems such as refrigerat­ors, ice makers, lights and heaters.

The black-box module and handsets have an IPX7 rating, and the wired H1 and wireless rechargeab­le H1P handsets feature 4-inch Gorilla Glass multitouch displays, built-in mics and 85 dBA speakers. The black box includes a splitter so a single VHF antenna can be used for Cortex and another VHF radio. Systems start at $1,799; vespermari­ne.com.

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