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07/04/2026

Bridge & GMDSS Radio Equipment. Overview and Troubleshooting Guide

Modern ships rely on Bridge navigation electronics and the GMDSS (Global Maritime Distress and Safety System) to ensure safe navigation and emergency communication anywhere in the world. Failure of this equipment can stop a vessel from sailing, cause Port State Control detention, or create real safety risks.

Bridge & GMDSS Radio Equipment. Overview and Troubleshooting Guide

This article explains the main bridge, GMDSS equipment and provides practical troubleshooting methods used onboard.

1. Bridge Navigation Equipment – Overview

Typical bridge electronics include:

  • Radar (X-band / S-band)
  • ECDIS
  • Gyrocompass & repeaters
  • Autopilot
  • Speed log
  • Echo sounder
  • AIS
  • BNWAS
  • GPS receivers
  • Navtex
  • VDR / S-VDR

Most of these systems are interconnected through NMEA 0183 / NMEA 2000 / Ethernet networks and depend on:

  • 230V AC bridge supply
  • 24V DC emergency supply
  • Gyro heading
  • GPS position/time
  • Ship LAN / serial data

When one fails, several alarms may appear at once.

2. GMDSS Equipment – Overview

The GMDSS radio room normally includes:

Mandatory Equipment

  • MF/HF radio - Long-range distress & communication
  • VHF DSC radio - Short-range distress
  • Inmarsat terminal - Satellite distress & safety
  • EPIRB - Automatic distress beacon
  • SART / AIS-SART - Survival craft location
  • Navtex receiver - Maritime safety info
  • Portable VHF radios - Survival craft communication
  • GMDSS batteries & charger - Emergency power

All GMDSS equipment must operate from main + emergency power + dedicated batteries.

3. Most Common Failure Causes (Real Ship Experience)

Across fleets, 80% of bridge/GMDSS faults come from:

  1. Power supply problems
  2. Antenna / coax cable faults
  3. Corroded connectors
  4. Software freezes
  5. Incorrect configuration after blackout
  6. Failed backup batteries
  7. Data network failures (gyro/GPS missing)

Always check the simple things first.

4. Golden Troubleshooting Principle

When bridge equipment fails, always check in this order:

  1. Power
  2. Cables
  3. Sensors / inputs
  4. Settings / software
  5. Hardware modules

This prevents wasting hours.

5. Power Supply Troubleshooting

Typical Symptoms

  • Equipment dead
  • Random rebooting
  • Dim display
  • Multiple alarms after blackout

Checks

Step 1 — Verify supply sources

Check:

  • Main switchboard breaker
  • Emergency switchboard breaker
  • UPS output
  • Local power supply units

Measure:

  • 230V AC
  • 115V AC (some radars)
  • 24V DC bridge supply

Many bridge failures are simply tripped breakers after power blackout.

Step 2 — Check fuses and internal PSUs

Common failures:

  • Radar display PSU failure
  • ECDIS PC power supply
  • VHF internal fuse blown

Always inspect:

  • Burn smell
  • Overheated PSU
  • Fan not running

6. Antenna & RF Problems (Very Common in GMDSS)

Symptoms

  • Poor TX/RX range
  • High SWR alarm
  • DSC test fails
  • No GPS signal
  • Inmarsat cannot log in

Causes

  • Salt corrosion in coax connectors
  • Water inside antenna cable
  • Broken antenna ground
  • Lightning damage
  • Loose coax after mast work

How to Check RF System

Visual inspection

Check:

  • Antenna base
  • Coax connectors
  • Deck glands
  • Rust / green corrosion

Coax cable test

Measure continuity:

  • Inner conductor → OK
  • Shield → OK
  • No short between them

If short circuit → cable water ingress.

7. GPS & Gyro Data Loss

Bridge equipment heavily depends on:

  • GPS position/time
  • Gyro heading

If GPS or gyro fails → multiple alarms appear everywhere.

Typical alarms

  • Radar: “No heading”
  • AIS: “No position”
  • ECDIS: “Position lost”
  • Autopilot: “Gyro fail”

Troubleshooting

Check NMEA signal distribution:

  1. Verify GPS receiver working
  2. Check NMEA splitter / buffer
  3. Check serial cables
  4. Restart data distribution unit

One faulty NMEA buffer can stop the entire bridge.

8. Radar Troubleshooting

Radar not transmitting

Check:

  • Scanner rotation
  • Magnetron warm-up
  • Waveguide moisture
  • Safety interlock switches
  • TX fuse

If scanner rotates but no picture → likely transmitter unit fault.

Radar stops rotating

Possible causes:

  • Scanner motor capacitor failure
  • Gearbox seized
  • Slip ring worn
  • Water ingress

9. VHF / MF-HF Radio Troubleshooting

Cannot transmit

Check:

  1. Antenna tuner (MF/HF)
  2. VSWR alarm
  3. PTT handset cable
  4. Microphone failure

Cannot receive

Check:

  • Squelch setting
  • RF gain
  • Antenna switch
  • Speaker failure

10. Inmarsat Terminal Faults

Cannot log into satellite

Check:

  • GPS input (mandatory!)
  • Ship position entered
  • Antenna blocked by crane/mast
  • Gyro input (for stabilization)

Very often failure is due to missing GPS signal.

11. EPIRB / SART Issues

Common problems:

  • Expired battery
  • Hydrostatic release expired
  • Self-test fails
  • Antenna cracked

Always check expiry dates:

  • Battery: every 5 years
  • HRU: every 2 years

PSC frequently detains ships for this.

12. GMDSS Battery System Troubleshooting

Typical faults

  • Battery not charging
  • Low capacity alarm
  • Charger failure
  • Battery swollen

Checks

Measure:

  • Charger output voltage
  • Battery voltage under load
  • Electrolyte level (lead-acid)

A weak battery may show normal voltage but fail under load test.

13. After Blackout – Common Issues

After ship blackout expect:

  • GPS reset to default
  • Radar time wrong
  • AIS MMSI missing
  • Inmarsat requires re-login
  • Network switches frozen

Always perform:

  • Full power reset of bridge network
  • Check date/time sync

14. Preventive Maintenance Tips

  • Monthly GMDSS test
  • Inspect antennas every 3 months
  • Tighten RF connectors yearly
  • Test batteries every 6 months
  • Keep bridge electronics ventilated
  • Backup ECDIS & radio settings

Preventive maintenance saves huge troubleshooting time.

Bridge and GMDSS systems are interconnected networks, not standalone devices. Most failures originate from:

  • Power supply issues
  • Antenna/cable faults
  • Missing GPS/Gyro data
  • Battery problems

Systematic troubleshooting — starting from power and working toward equipment — is the key to fast fault finding onboard.

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