Remote Boat Monitoring: here comes Navico GoFree Vessel/Track and Siren Marine MTC

Navico_GoFree_Vessel_apps_for_GoFree_Track_cPanbo.jpg

While off-boat monitoring was already getting better and more competitive, finally one of the big four marine electronics brands is about to join the fray. Navico’s GoFree Connected Vessel concept is not just important because it will be marketed and serviced worldwide, but also because the development team took the time to think out a truly comprehensive system that can potentially serve a wide variety of boaters in multiple ways. Meanwhile team Siren Marine has been building on their years of remote monitoring, tracking and control experience and will soon announce a series of second-generation MTC products that sound exciting. This entry will take a preliminary look at both these systems and I’ll soon share testing results on two more…



Navico_GoFree_Vessel_app_and_cloud_services_aPanbo.jpgGoFree Vessel is the online component of GoFree Connected Vessel, and the screen above shows the unique TripReplay feature that will be available with some service plans. You can re-enjoy a cruise or a fishing adventure with all sorts of collected boat data plus geo-positioned photos, and you can share such trips via social media. And that’s just a fun benefit of the system design. The online Vessel dashboard, along with the GoFree Track Full-time Engine & Monitoring hardware, can also take care of traditional monitoring tasks like high bilge alarms and geofence theft protection. Remote control of appropriate devices like deck lights and air conditioning is supported, and the data logging routines are optimized to help you or your techs troubleshoot engine problems.

When you think about it, there are so many benefits possible when you connect lots of boat sensing with Internet cloud data storage and smart software. I know that the GoFree developers have thought about it a lot, and here’s an impressive TripReplay detail: Charter fleet companies that install GoFree Track systems to remotely monitor their assets will also be able to give limited data access to clients, so that you or I can add our charter trips to the personal GoFree Vessel site where we may also keep track of our own boat(s). That’s smart!

Navico_GoFree_Connected_Vessel_system_diagram_cPanbo.jpgWireless communications are key to a connected boat and GoFree Track seems to offer every possibility. If you download the brochure, you’ll see that the WiFi model will retail for $799 with free basic connected services like geofencing and email alerting up to five sensors. An $8 per month WiFi HD plan gets you lots more data, online dashboard access with TripReplay, remote controls, and much more. And since the Track device “automatically stores over a month’s worth of complete vessel, engine, and navigation data,” you will still get online access to your underway data even if you only use marina WiFi for automatic uploading (and watching the boat when you’re ashore).

There will also be a $999 Cell-Fi version of GoFree Track, plus an $800 satellite option, with Navico including the global cellular and Iridium service subscriptions in their various SD and HD cell and sat plans. And, finally, I believe that a Track WiFi-only owner will be able to provide it with their own cell or sat connectivity via their boat WiFi router. The communications choices are comprehensive, and so are the sensor interfaces.



Navico_GoFree_Track_prototype_hardware_cPanbo.jpgThat black GoFree Track Telematics Module can connect not only to the oblong GPS/WiFi antenna, but also to a boat’s NMEA 2000 network and to one or two engines using the J1939 data protocol. I believe that the module will even bridge J1939 gauge info to the boat’s N2K screens — a nice added feature — and it also collects the engine data at very high sample rate. That data is normally downsampled for regular logging and online display like the TripReplay, but if an alarm is tripped, the high resolution data before and after the alarm is saved for troubleshooting. That’s thoughtful!

Meanwhile, the cable going to the beige breakout box above apparently includes 8 digital inputs — 4 of which are dedicated to available GoFree entry, temp, shore power, and high water sensors — and 6 analog to digital inputs, as well as 5 digital outputs and a RS232 port. In other words, it seems like a GoFree Track module could be easily set up to collect a lot of useful boat data and also monitor a few basic security sensors, but it can be further customized with multiple sensors and relays. I’m not sure how an installer will access the Track’s setup software, but hopefully it can be done via app or browser and WiFi, and of course, it also seems possible that Simrad, B&G, and Lowrance multifunction displays will eventually get Track interfaces, the Navico effect.

Come to think of it, isn’t it possible that a boater with a Navico display and a Track system with the Iridium connection may eventually be able to message with friends, family, and support services from anywhere on the water, while also sharing track and other data with them via GoFree Vessel pages? And isn’t it possible that we’ll soon see something similar from Garmin since they acquired the excellent DeLorme inReach Iridium messaging system last February? But I should shut up for now, as the GoFree Connected Vessel system seems quite ambitious as is, and it’s just coming to market.

Siren Marine MTC

Siren_Marine_connected_boat_graphic_and_prototype_MTC_hardware_aPanbo.jpgThe details of Siren Marine’s several new MTC systems are less accessible — little is online yet except for this Siren blog entry and this Providence Journal business article — but I do know that Siren has already been providing cellular monitoring, tracking and control on many boats for many years (Panbo review here), and that means a lot. Just moving sensor data off the boat is a complex path strewn with potential points of failure, but a monitoring system should not only be reliable but easy to use. The devil is very much in details the average boater doesn’t really want to know about.



At any rate, the new Siren module shown above is 6 x 4 inches with both GPS and global cell antennas inside, and backup power. The bottom cover hides a prodigious set of terminals and ports including NMEA 2000 and Ethernet. There will be three models with the middle MTC scheduled to ship early next year, followed by the MTC-Pro and MT. Siren Founder/CEO Dan Harper shared some planned features:

  • Wireless sensors for all inputs
  • Full hardwired capability “if desired through the most convenient and installer friendly terminal interface achieved to-date through our proprietary enclosure design”
  • Multiple bilge, temperature, and sensor zones
  • Unlimited discrete wireless sensor possibilities
  • 3 relay control outputs, all of which can be easily mapped to sensor control with the simple click of a button on the app
  • Built-in Blue Sea remote battery switch control
  • Amperage! “Yes, advanced battery monitoring will be available, though at first only high charge and draw alerts will be the main use, along with amperage reporting and history.”
  • Multiple engine hour inputs, with 3 time counters: basic fluid and filter change, minor overhaul – belts and filters [400h or the like], more thorough overhaul
  • Video — both on-demand and device initiated by sensor input.
  • Satellite accessory if satellite connectivity is desired or required.
  • WiFi — “initially for local access to the device in the absence of cellular, but may eventually be a WiFi hotspot for software updates for other onboard devices and general internet access.”
  • “The most advanced and easy, plain English user rule set capabilities ever achieved in boat monitoring for each input and sensor.”

Siren_Marine_prototype_2nd_gen_MTC_app_screens_aPanbo.jpgDan is excited — me too — and concluded the MTC feature list thusly: “Essentially, for the past year and a half, we have been working like crazy to take everything we have learned from our years in the boat monitoring business to create the ultimate platform, which will still be price competitive with everything on the market.” I notice efforts to deal with some of the detail devils on the new MTC app screens above. For instance, offering a custom delay period for a low voltage alert means that a boater can better create an alert that’s based on real battery state instead of transient dips caused by startup loads like refrigeration (and I gather that the Rules tab may offer even slicker solutions). By contrast, I’ve had to set the low voltage alarm on Gizmo’s test Boat Command system quite low because I can not avoid false alerts otherwise. (Here’s Steve Mitchell’s BC review, and I still agree that it’s solid system and a great value.)

I look forward to learning more about both the GoFree and Siren connected vessel systems and hopefully testing them. In fact, Gizmo will stay in the water all this winter in Maine (and I’m hardly going to any fall shows) largely so I can deep dive into systems like these (and make some needed repairs). I’ve already begun testing the highly wireless Yacht Protector system — just DAME Design Award nominated under its European brand name Dokensip — and I’ve fallen surprisingly in love with the bilge centric Nautic Alert system. Yes, I can now text Gizmo and get back a bilge water level measurement accurate to 0.1 inch, and that’s just the icing on the cake. Full review coming soon.

Panbo_testing_Yacht_Protector_and_Nautic_Alert_cPanbo.jpg



Ben Ellison

Ben Ellison

Panbo editor, publisher & chief bottlewasher from 4/2005 until 8/2018, and now pleased to have Ben Stein as a very able publisher, webmaster, and editing colleague. Please don't regard him as an "expert"; he's getting quite old and thinks that "fadiddling fumble-putz" is a more accurate description.

10 Responses

  1. Ben Ellison Ben Ellison says:

    And here’s another one!
    http://www.interactio.co/marine-products
    I think that most of the Interactio sensor, monitoring, etc. system is still very much in development, but they are taking orders for the Bluetooth fuel flow sensor (gasoline only, I think).
    The Interactio concept also illustrates how much overlap there can be between and on and off boat monitoring.

  2. HenryD says:

    Ben,
    All of these systems are just getting better each day.
    With the Garmin purchase of Delorme, I was hoping Navico would snatch up SPOT. A lot of the boaters I travel with use either Delorme or SPOT devices to allow family and friends to follow their travels. The GoFree TripReplay feature is SPOT on steroids. ActiveCaptain has an interface with Delorme and SPOT as part of their eCards/Friends product. Will Navico have an API for their data for something like ActiveCaptain?
    Does the telematrics box eliminate the need for the GoFree WIFI1 boat wifi module for connecting ipads to the Navico plotters?
    How much network traffic on the NEMA2000 backbone does this add? When connecting to the NSO evo2 plotter – does it slow the response time of the plotter?
    Will this interface with existing Navico products or will it only be available with the rumored NSO evo3 and NSS evo3 products?

  3. Ben Ellison Ben Ellison says:

    Hi HenryD,
    I will definitely be testing GoFree Track and Vessel as the various service levels roll out, but this is conjecture for now:
    * The Track module can not replace WiFi1 or WiFi built into Navico MFDs because it will not connect to those networks by Ethernet. In fact, I believe that the system architecture was designed to work on any boat, and so integration with Simrad, B&G, and Lowrance gear will be extra sauce that may not appear for a while.
    * I don’t know why Track would create any significant traffic on a NMEA2000 network. Essentially it will be a listening device.
    * I believe that SPOT is a wholly owned division of Globalstar and the technology is only simplex (one way) and somewhat regional, whereas DeLorme, and now Garmin, are only partners with Iridium but have access to global duplex (two way) small burst data messaging. That’s a lot of differences in terms of system integration and feature possibilities 😉

  4. mystery says:

    Is there a cost effective system that can work off of existing wifi on my boat? I already have a wifi system and it would be great not to have to pay for an additional service fee when one of these products can potentially re-use the existing wifi instead of needing its own cellular plan… maybe I can build something on my own? would want high water, smoke/co, AC, DC, and maybe security monitoring.

  5. Ben Ellison Ben Ellison says:

    Mystery, there are household security systems, even baby cams, that can be useful if your boat has a reliable WiFi connection. In fact, I have a FLIR FX camera installed on Gizmo right now and it let me know when the temperature went to 20 last night while I’m in St Lucia:
    http://www.flir.com/flirfx/
    But the only dedicated marine monitoring system using WiFi that I know of is the Navico GoFree discussed in this entry. The free WiFi services are pretty minimal (that’s installed on Gizmo too) but when the software is released a fairly modest HD WiFi service will do a lot.

  6. Roger Lines says:

    Hi,
    A quick update on the Interactio Fuel Flow system. We have been shipping systems throughout 2017 to customers running single gas engines up to twin diesels. Easy wireless installation makes it great for retrofits! http://www.interactio.co

  7. Grant Jenkins says:

    Ben – it’s been over 2 years since this post detailing all the cool features of the GoFree Vessel hardware – but I’m thinking something got sidetracked along the way. I don’t see anyone selling it online (at least in North America), and even Navico’s own store website only lists one package, and that shows availability as “limited”. A lot of the other part numbers from the original brochure come up empty.
    Do you know if this actually made it to market anywhere? I can’t even find decent images or a manual online, nor can the local dealer….

    • Ben Ellison Ben Ellison says:

      Hi Grant, I don’t completely understand what happened to GoFree Track as a retail product, but I think it got out mainly as a charter fleet management system and then interest within Navico petered out for a while. I still have Track installed on Gizmo, the hardware works great, and many of the software feature promises were kept since install, like Trip Replay.

      However, there was no trace of Track at all in the Navico booth here at METS, though I understand that we may soon see a Navico monitoring product relaunch.

  8. Grant Jenkins says:

    Thank Ben – with all the interest in the monitoring segment of the market, I thought this would be an obvious priority for Navico, but it seems to have gone by the wayside…. anyhow thanks for your response.

  9. Ben Ellison Ben Ellison says:

    Looks like Simrad is taking another crack at boat monitoring, this time much simpler and probably quite inexpensive. Hello BoatConnect:

    https://youtu.be/JaUrM62Cq0Q

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