My AIS transmitter/receiver is mounted near my Radar tower at 10ft from WL and has integrated GPS. I get 17NM to a high powered base station receive and over 10NM receive on most ships (class A). Prior to this, I used a splitter and found I was getting around 5miles receive max and that the poor quality of the splitter was negatively affecting the VHF transmit/receive distance and that was not desirable - do not buy the Glomex splitter. Also, having a second antenna away from the mast is desirable if you get dismasted.
the AIS is shown on my Chartplotter as well as my VHF via USB and NMEA0183 respectively. Connecting Chartplotter/MFD, VHF/DSC and AIS together gives you the best chance to see and be seen in the event of an incident
2 wks ago during the Lake Michigan Clipper cup we reacted to an Active DSC MOB alarm, which was displayed on my Chartplotter screen while 20 miles outside of Port Washington, WI. The Info I had in front of me was the distance, direction, point on the map, last report age and MMSI. It was a false alarm but having that info straight away was pretty much enough convincing that my team will probably install an MOB1 in their Life jackets - I already have one.