dylanwinter
Well-Known Member
Falling in cold 'North Sea' water, without any heat loss prevention brings into play a '1-10-1'' timetable I read once.
In cold water there's the 1 minute of hyperventilation as the cold hits the person.
After that phase there's 10 minutes of being able to function, donning gloves, deploying sprayhood or EPIRB etc.
There follows the 1 hour of decline leading to death.
A survival suit with the standard offshore 3 layers beneath it will keep a person going for far longer than that I'd believe just by the nature of these suits that I wear 2-3 times a month now, and comparing them to the 'Old wetsuits' that I used a lifetime ago as a submarine swimmer where on occasion one could be in the water for an hour also.
I'd hate to try and don a proper survival suit on a 'smallish' boat in any sort of inclement weather, and wearing the suit plus a lifejacket on a small boat would give real issues by virtue of bulk and 'snag profile'.
Surely the solution would be a 2 piece Fladen type of flotation suit where the survival times are very good if bad things happen and can be worn normally without constraint. They're normal in usage at many boatyards that I've been to recently in Scotland over the winter, also very common on MFV's I believe.
They're about £120 I know, but if it was produced with a 'Yottie' label on it they'd have an extra zero on the end some might say....
any more thoughts on this option then chaps
it sounds affordable
I will not be setting off unless the weatherforecast is as perfect as it can be
after katie L is a small boat
but I have been to the Orkneys twice for the BBC and it was such a wonderful place I would really love to explore the islands
D
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