NMEA 2025: Vanemar Boat Monitoring

Boat monitoring isn’t a new category, but looking around the exhibition hall at the 2025 National Marine Electronics Association (NMEA) conference, you might think differently. The hall featured at least eight companies exhibiting boat monitoring products and nearly half the entrants in the Best New Product awards were boat monitors. So, why so much activity in boat monitoring? Frankly, I’m not entirely sure. However, there is a noticeable improvement in the quality of all the monitors I saw. I am excited by the refinement and advances in the products on display. Speaking of refinement, Turkey based Vanemar was there displaying their system with wireless sensors, NMEA 2000 integration, video capabilities and a slick app.

Vanemar’s monitoring system focuses on ease of installation and operation. The system utilizes Zigbee wireless sensors, NMEA 2000 integration via WiFi, and battery operated WiFi cameras. These technology choices should minimize installation and provide reliable connectivity during operation. In previous testing of monitoring products, wireless sensors have sometimes proved cantankerous. I expect that a well established standard like Zigbee will prove more reliable.

Vanemar offers three bundles to get started. The starter system with just the main hub and GPS receiver starts at $549 and offers location, battery, tamper, and geofence monitoring. The basic bundle steps up to $749 and adds high water, entry or window, motion sensor, and temperature and humidity sensors. Lastly, the extended bundle notches up to $899 and adds a smoke sensor and a smart plug that also doubles as a shore power sensor. Additional sensors range between $79 and $139 each. The NMEA 2000 adapter is $299 and monitoring costs $18 a month or $180 a year.



Vanemar clearly paid attention to the unboxing experience and keeping things clear and simple for the user. Installing the system starts out with just two connections: one for power and the other connecting the included GPS antenna. All the other connections are wireless. In looking through their materials and the sensors displayed at their booth, I realized there does not appear to be a bilge pump sensor. There is a high water sensor to alert you if the water level in a specific bilge gets too high, but no bilge pump sensor. I think that’s an omission that needs to be addressed. I would much rather learn that a pump is running too often rather than wait until the pump fails and the bilge fills.

In my relatively limited time spent with Vanemar’s app, I noted a clean interface, responsive experience, and good charting behind the summary slides shown on the main screens. With the exception of bilge pump monitoring, Vanemar offers pretty complete coverage between wireless sensors, NMEA 2000, and video integration. NMEA 2000 network integration comes via a an Actisense W2K-1 NMEA 2000 to WiFi gateway. Utilizing a WiFi connected W2K-1 keeps the Vanemar installation very simple and offers mount location flexibility by not needing to mount the hub directly near the NMEA 2000 network. The NMEA 2000 integration isn’t limited to reading values from the network. From the demos I saw at the conference, Vanemar has completed a complete digital switching implementation, including voice control.

It’s been a while since I’ve done a monitoring bake off, but I think it’s time to stack a few of the latest and greatest systems up and take a look at them side-by-side. I’m planning to get my hands on a Vanemar system as soon as my travel schedule calms. I look forward to reporting on how it does in real world use and comparing it to the best monitors on the market currently.



Ben Stein

Ben Stein

Publisher of Panbo.com, passionate marine electronics enthusiast, 100-ton USCG master.

3 Responses

  1. Thanks Ben – needs a quick edit though on this sentence:

    ” The NMEA 2000 integration isn’t must limited to reading values from the network. Vanemar”

    Cheers,

  2. William Deertz says:

    Can the system monitor and alert on any PGN on the N2k network? I looked at their website and couldn’t find a users manual (so frustrating when companies don’t provide these for pre-purchase perusal).

    Also, anyway to setup alerts via wifi rather than cellular? For those of us with 24/7 internet and particularly when offshore starlink (ie. WiFi) is more robust.

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