I can straight away think of the RNLI/MCA view on a MOB incident turning into reports of multiple, personsless, unattributed LJs floating about possibly for days or weeks afterwards, sucking up SAR resources to prove a negative (that eight people weren’t washed overboard from multiple boats on some dark night). Even if you marked the randomly lobbed jackets,every time one turned up they would a) have to recover it and check it’s yours and b) contact you and re-check how many MOBs you had. “Did you lob over a 1989 Seago blah blah mk 1 with mauve piping or was yours a 1993 Seago blah wotsit with Velcro, sir? If you’re not sure we’ll have to go back out”
LJs wo somebody in them will be blown miles away even if weighted with a kilo or two (versus 80kg person) straight away
If these jackets have lights and the MOB is at night, rescuers might spend ages rounding up flashing empty jackets while the MOB in another flashing jacket passes away.
Hard to say what’s silly idea this is
Danbuoys have far less windage than lifejackets and far less wetted surface to ‘get cruising’, try one out- but even so they are understood to be an approximation. More importantly it is unlikely that the day after your incident a random fisherman will go ob wearing a danbuoy.
Sorry for the autocorrect (which you took for poor grammar)- I think it’s a silly idea; and good ones do not need a bit of ad-hominem to defend them
The idea of a trail won't work, as already said, because the lifejackets will blow off far quicker than the MoB. Maybe not in a F2, but why would you need a trail in a F2?
And if you're going to throw additional lifejackets at a MoB in case they help what's wrong with throwing spare in-date ones? Where are you going to keep the old lifejackets anyway until they are needed without mixing them up with the good ones?
Or you could duct tape them to the top of the mast in case of capsize.![]()
You guys are having a laugh, Yes?????
Andrew Taylor was rescued because he had a personal AIS. Moreover, it took him some time to get it to work. During that period the boat searched fruitlessly Yes, because he could not be seenand had little or no idea where he was. The point I am trying to address Only when he turned it on and they got the signal were they able to begin an effective operation (BTW I did the RORC series a few years ago with someone who was on the boat, so I know how uncertain they felt until that AIS came in).
Pretty sure nothing other than his AIS (and the LJ he was actually wearing) saved him, and no amount of inflatable things off the transom would be relevant.
As a positive comment, consider attaching drogues to your LJs, you would then be more comparable to the jonbuoy, which has one.
Note that it’s you, not me, who considers the jonbuoy effective.
I don't carry spare in date ljackets. But I have lots of old ones.
Well, it is nicer than you writing: "Hard to say what a silly idea this is" in #2
The drogue idea was mentioned in one of the ybw links I posted. Credit to whoever posted it.
Did I say I thought the jonbouy effective? I don't think I did. I can't be bothered to go back and look.
I think it is an expensive piece of kit that can be replaced with a £0 scrap lifejacket, but you said it is a silly idea.
Anyway, I only mentioned it in case anyone thought it was a good idea and thought they could make use of their scrap ljs.
I have nothing to gain except the good feeling that I may have helped someone if the idea worked.
I also have nothing to gain by telling people that suphuric acid from batteries with a dead cell can clean metal.
I will leave this thread now because it is not giving me any joy.
I was only suggesting an idea.
I have a lot to learn.
If you want my opinion..... ( loud chorus of 'Not on your nellie!' ) I believe it interesting and every-now-and-then useful to have a long look at the many 'unthunk assumptions' we have in our boating. I'd encourage more of that....
F'r example, consider the horseshoe life ring thing. Most of us have two of them. Have you even tried to throw one to 'someone who's fallen overboard' while you sail along'? Have you any idea how very far from a MOB that's probably going to be? Trials, lots of them, show the reality.
There are those who suggest they could act as 'a marker', for the general location. In lumpy seas, 'general location' is far from good enough, as the Andrew Taylor report/vid above illustrates. And, if you think you'll want a marker, then have a marker.
Better still, have two.
Deploy one right away. If the MOB is not close enough to do a 'crash tack' and round up right adjacent, don't immediately change heading. Count to, say, 15 - then deploy a second marker. The two of them will give you not a 'general location' but a Leading Line back to the MOB. Sail/motor up that, just a little to windward to allow something for any leeway you may have made, and you will pass very close to the MOB.
Then a Throw Bag is likely to find the target better than a wind-blown horseshoe thing.
Just a thought.....![]()