Broadcast to Allied Merchant Ships

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Broadcast to Allied Merchant Ships (BAMS) was a protocol and system of broadcasts for Allied merchant ship convoys that was used during World War II to provide for the transmission of official messages to merchant ships in any part of the world.[1][2] The BAMS system is designed for communication by the best employment of radio stations available.

BAMS Zones of Operation across the world 1944.

On the outbreak of World War II, the British Admiralty took over control from the GPO, and the embryo merchant ship broadcast system, called GBMS came into force. Ships listened at routine times to the Rugby Radio Station and to area stations, otherwise keeping watch on the international distress frequency at 500 kHz. After the fall of France, the Admiralty assumed control of all Allied merchant shipping which complied with British procedures. When America entered the war, the world was divided into two strategic zones, the Admiralty being responsible for merchant shipping in one, and the United States Navy in the other.[3]

The GBMS organisation proved to be inadequate for the efficient clearance of traffic for a number of reasons, including poor coverage by wireless telegraphy (W/T) stations, obsolescent equipment, and many ships only able to listen at single or two operator periods.[3] The systems gradually improved, and from 1942 all Allied merchant ships had to have two radio technicians on board, with more modern equipment being fitted to ships.[3]

In 1942, the GBMS system was superseded by the combined Anglo-American system of BAMS, and the addition of US Navy W/T stations improved the poor coverage. For ship to shore communications, under radio silence, ships in convoy passed any essential messages through their escort for transmission. The Commodore's and Vice-Commodore's ships, rescue ships, merchant aircraft carriers, and ships fitted with Huff Duff were fitted when possible for intercommunication with other escort vessels.[3]

After the war, captured records showed that the German Kriegsmarine Beobachtungsdienst (Signals Intelligence Service) had been reading BAMS since the start of the conflict. Rodger Winn studied the effects of ULTRA intelligence decrypts in relation to U-boat movements and realized that BAMS was clear to the Germans; in 1943 he eventually convinced the Admiralty to make the necessary revisions to BAMS.[4]

Description

Shore to Ship Communication

References

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