Headsets, anybody use them?

Fair comment and we do indeed use a certain amount of hand signals but none of the above works when madam has her back turned to me and at present she insists on doing the deck work (all 8 stone of her) with me on the helm because helming makes her very nervous even in open water, let alone the confines of a marina

I doubt me she will ever have the confidence to helm the boat alongside a pontoon although a mooring buoy maybe

Her hearing is poor but not (yet) so bad as to need hearing aids but getting her attention is the major problem followed by my having to bellow questions and requests (aka instructions that may be carried out if the recipient feels so inclined :D)

We use a set when I'm up the mast twice each year, quite useful. Never used for mooring or anchoring. I use hand signals when retrieving the anchor, direction to anchor, ahead, slow, stop and reverse. Seems to work and I never turn around, simply signal behind my back. I just trust my wife to watch the signals, no big deal.

We use a £12 ebay remote windlass system when mooring stern to a quay. I trigger the remote which lets my wife know when to start running chain out, seems to work. She comes back to help with lines and we use the cheap remote to adjust the anchor chain.

Headset seems too much bother for mooring and anchoring as we manage without shouting about 99% of the time. I sometimes make a sign for "what's the depth? (index finger & thumb)" and get fingers held up showing metres depth. She sometimes shouts the depth but very, very rarely.
 
Couple of years ago I was in a West Marine in Florida. Went to the counter and asked where the headsets were. The guys yells across the store "Hey Joe, do we have any marriage savers left"!

I laughed but they are aptly named. We found them very useful - no yelling, especially during stressful docking!
 
If there are just two of you and want something for occasional use, we found a pair of standard phone bluetooth headsets work fine. For example https://www.halfords.com/technology/bluetooth-car-kits/bluetooth-car-kits/halfords-bluetooth-headset?istCompanyId=b8708c57-7a02-4cf6-b2c0-dc36b54a327e&istFeedId=367c5610-f937-4c81-8609-f84582324cd6&istItemId=xmlittplm&istBid=t&_$ja=tsi&utm_medium=affiliate&utm_source=skimlinks_phg&utm_campaign=phgreferral

Assuming you both have a mobile (they can be left in the cabin) you make a mobile call to your partner, then, on ours, its a double press of the earpiece to recall the last number.

Www.solocoastalsailing.co.uk

That’s a bl##dy good idea!
 
I have a pair of V6 Bluetooth motorcycle/referee sets

You need two of these https://www.amazon.co.uk/Headphone-...ree+bluetooth+intercom&qid=1568655334&sr=8-26

Then you need two of the ear pieces that hook over the ear such as these https://www.amazon.co.uk/Vnetphone-...eree+bluetooth+intercom&qid=1568655522&sr=8-7

Do not make the mistake of buying the kit for motorcycle helmets thinking that you ear piece for you mobile might work. It won't.

They are great for mast work and for avoiding shouting when mooring stern to in Greek harbours

TudorSailor

We use these, single best thing I've bought, makes anchoring in a busy bay so much less stressful.
 
I have a pair of V6 Bluetooth motorcycle/referee sets

You need two of these https://www.amazon.co.uk/Headphone-...ree+bluetooth+intercom&qid=1568655334&sr=8-26

Then you need two of the ear pieces that hook over the ear such as these https://www.amazon.co.uk/Vnetphone-...eree+bluetooth+intercom&qid=1568655522&sr=8-7

TudorSailor

A cheaper option that uses kit you already have is to use Intercom for Android (probably iOS variants available)
It uses a Bluetooth connection to turn two phones into a pair of walky-talkies. No mobile data used. With bog-standard wireless headphone you can keep phone in pocket or on chart table and chat normally while at opposite ends of the boat/mast.
 
I wonder if the OP saw who I saw at Woolverstone on Sunday using some headsets and that set me off on an Amazon search for something similar. I like the idea, having to shout can easily come across the wrong way, though I am now worried about people being able to hear my muttered, 'WTF are you doing?'
 
We decided to use Bluetooth phone headsets and to open up a phone call. Worked really well, with no need for shouting etc. However, my wife knocked hers into the sea when undoing a stern line....

Replacement on its way, but she will be wearing a bandana to keep it in place in future!

Denis
Olivia Jane
 
Sena SPH-10 - excellent sound, USB recharging, programmable set-up if need be.
Used when up the mast and anchoring at times in order to get a running commentary on depth while I am at the bow.
Not cheap but work very well and integrate with phones if you wish to.
 
A cheaper option that uses kit you already have is to use Intercom for Android (probably iOS variants available)
It uses a Bluetooth connection to turn two phones into a pair of walky-talkies. No mobile data used. With bog-standard wireless headphone you can keep phone in pocket or on chart table and chat normally while at opposite ends of the boat/mast.

Does that mean two BT connections per phone, one between phones the other to the two headphones? There seem to be several Android apps with similar names...
 
That’s two phones each with a Bluetooth headset paired to it. Person 1 calls person 2 and, hey presto, you can talk to each other from opposite ends of the boat without shouting. It’s the cheapest option, although there will be call charges.
 
I wish VHF radios had a jack plug for headsets. I tend to use a headset when calling for moorings etc when motoring as I find it much easier.

Steveeasy
 
I bought and still have a set of eartec walkie talkies bought in t when we lived on a 47 ft trawler in the USA, sadly the charger is only a 110v one and the batteries are flat. Prior to then I cobbled a pair of kid's toy headset walkie talkies to fit adult heads, as per a PBO article years ago, IIRC cost just £1 each on Lymington market, looked odd but very effective and only SWMBO got to hear my bad language:disgust:.. I must search a 220V charger or small 110V inverter..:encouragement:..
 
I wish VHF radios had a jack plug for headsets. I tend to use a headset when calling for moorings etc when motoring as I find it much easier.

Steveeasy

I used to use a pair of UHF walkie talkie with a VOX headset. 2 issues was that there was a loss of speech when the radio went into transmit mode and the radio was half duplex where the ref/motorcycle headsets are full duplex.
 
We decided to use Bluetooth phone headsets and to open up a phone call. Worked really well, with no need for shouting etc. However, my wife knocked hers into the sea when undoing a stern line....

Replacement on its way, but she will be wearing a bandana to keep it in place in future!

Denis
Olivia Jane

I attached a lanyard to ours that clips onto the LJ in case of such an event.
 
I can still do full engine start and pre-take-off checks for at least three a/c from memory. That's connect ground power, start APU, start nr 1, (disconnect ground-power) ground power disconnected, start Nr 2, flaps up, flaps to 5, flaps to 15, flaps to 45, flaps full, flaps and slats, full left elevon up/right elevon down, full right elevon up/left elevon down, full elevon up (stick back) full elevon down (stick forward), autostab trim down, autostab trim up, confirm all hatches closed and locked, clear to taxi and then marshal (and there's 25 of them, plus a few for pilots, all encoded in law).

I really struggle to see the need for headsets on anything below 23 metres and can't help wonder what happens if the headset fails, falls off, someone jumps on your channel (this happens surprising regularly on motorbike systems I've found). Then again I'm old and grumpy...
 
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