MAROB Program
All Information with Respect to the MAROB Program Are
Preliminary and Subject to Revision
The MAROB Program is an experimental voluntary marine observation program
of the National Weather Service in the early stages of development.
It seeks the participation of all mariners, both commercial
and recreational, which are not part of the more in-depth
VOS program. It is the goal of the program to collect as
many marine observations as practicable, to improve the
accuracy of coastal, offshore and high seas forecasts, by
taking advantage of technological advancements in marine communications and the proliferation of the Internet.
MAROB observations will be in coded form which can be better
ingested, distributed and displayed by forecasters than
observations in plain language. The MAROB report format
will be identical to coded reports of the Voluntary Observing Ship (VOS) Program, with the exception
that "MAROB" will replace "BBXX". The MAROB program will
differ from the VOS Program in at least several other aspects:
Although MAROBs will be used by forecasters in forecast
decision process, these data will likely not be used directly
by computer models; Any communications charges and the cost
of any observing equipment will not be reimbursed by the
Weather Service; The observation elements collected will
typically be a subset of those collected in the full VOS
report.
The National Weather Service is in the process of developing
cooperative arrangements with organizations such as the
United States
Power Squadrons, the
Coast Guard Auxiliary, the WinLink
2000 Global Radio Network, the Maritime
Mobile Service Network,
CruiseEmail.com,
Ocens,
Sailmail,
SkyMate,
MarineNet Wireless,
and the YOTREP
Reporting System, to both train observers and forward
observations to NWS. Technologies utilized may include cellular
telephone, HF Marine radio, MF Marine radio, VHF Marine
Radio, Ham Radio, Webforms and e-mail.
In several cases, MAROB reporting schemes will work in
conjunction with vessel position reporting systems such
as WinLink's Position
Reporter, the Maritime Mobile Service Network's ShipTrak,
and the YOTREPs
Reporter, to enhance the safety of mariners.
At present, mariners may participate in the MAROB program in any of several ways:
1. By sending in YOTREPs (pronounced Yacht Reps) using Pangolin's YOTREP Offshore Reporter software.
This function may be performed directly aboard the vessel or the observation data forwarded to a volunteer ashore. YOTREPs are converted to the MAROB format and forwarded to the National Weather Service by Pangolin Software. For documentation on sending YOTREPS/MAROBs using YOTREP Offshore Reporter CLICK HERE
2. By sending in YOTREPs via WinLink
2000 Global Radio Network, or Sailmail using their AIRMAIL software. AIRMAIL will be upgraded in the near future for greater compatibility with MAROB.
3. By entering the observed data into Pangolin’s freeware program PANMAROB.EXE and sending the encoded data to the National Weather Service via e-mail. This function may be performed directly aboard the vessel or the observation data forwarded to a volunteer ashore. For documentation on sending MAROBs using PANMAROB.exe CLICK HERE
4. By sending in YOTREPS via e-mail in the WINLINK/AIRMAIL format style. This function may be performed directly aboard the vessel or the observation data forwarded to a volunteer ashore. YOTREPs are converted to the MAROB format and forwarded to the National Weather Service by Pangolin Software see www.pangolin.co.nz For documentation on sending YOTREPS/MAROBS via e-mail in the WINLINK/AIRMAIL format CLICK HERE
5. For the real "power user", by entering the observation data into the AMVER/SEAS software (see http://www.vos.noaa.gov/) of the Voluntary Observing Ship (VOS) program and sending the encoded data to the National Weather Service via e-mail. This option is only recommended for those familiar with the VOS program. Save the observation data using the Transmit/Save ASCII function to the met.txt file, and copy/paste the applicable data into an e-mail of a format described in the procedure for sending MAROBs via PANMAROB.exe above. This function may be performed directly aboard the vessel or the observation data forwarded to a volunteer ashore.
6. By manually encoding the observation data following the guidance of the NWS Observing Handbook No 1 (www.nws.noaa.gov/om/marine/handbk1.pdf), and sending the encoded data to the National Weather Service via e-mail in the format described in the procedure for sending MAROBs via PANMAROB.exe above. . This option is only recommended for those familiar with the VOS program. This function may be performed directly aboard the vessel or the observation data forwarded to a volunteer ashore.
7. Using WINLINK’s QTH Reporter restricted webpage which is intended for the net control operators of large maritime mobile ham nets. Send an e-mail to http://www.nws.noaa.gov/os/marine/feedback.htm for further information. For documentation on sending MAROBs using QTh Reporter CLICK HERE
Note: Any reference to a commercial product or service does not imply any endorsement by the National Weather Service as to function or suitability for your purpose or environment.
Other voluntary marine observation programs of the National Weather Service
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