I deployed a liferaft today..

Seagreen

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Faced with a "dire emergency", I set off the liferaft.

Now, I ought to clarify. The "dire emergency" was a lack of paddling pool on a hot sunday morning, and the liferaft was last serviced 12 years ago, and I bought it for a few quid to be a paddling pool, but that's not very interesting. What is of interest is what happened when I pulled the cord on a 27 year old liferaft, if any of your are tempted by Ebay offers. The raft in question is an RFD 4 person Seasava Mk. 1 sport model, for all you liferaft spotters.

First, the liferaft actually inflated as planned! Wow! My kids were very impressed. However, of real interest was the state of the raft and its contents. Various horrible faults were found:

1) The top-up valve was refitted incorrectly and continued to let air out.

2) The Pressure relief valve was no longer totally secured to the raft material and lost CO2 very fast. This valve eventually blew right out of the hull. This would have been catastrophic in any circumstance other that being inflated on a lawn.

There was also a small leak hole near the canopy support.

All the emergency kit bits were in the bag, but:

3) The torch did not work as the bulb was broken - the spare bulb works fine.
4) Spare batteries, 1 had corroded, the rest were just flat, as expected.

5) The rescue line and quoit. The line had a defect about 2/3 rds along, and had been knotted together - this was an original manufacturing fault.

Apart from that, it was all in fairly good nick, apart from some perishing on the rubber safety line supports. Apart from some big repairs - the repair kit glue was fine- the raft works very well as a pool. I shall be removing the C02 bottle, and patching the hole, and after removing the knife, and all the string from the raft, its a lot of fun for the kids.

But...

If I'd been daft enough to think that I could actually use it for real, and a lot of rafts end up on ebay, the consequences don't bear thinking about. Just a warning.

I think the quoit line was a manufacturers fault, for not checking the line as they made up the quoit bundle, and the Top-up valve, a servicing fault. The pressure valve, like some of the other parts on the raft had just perished and fractured, though had never been exposed to sunlight. I expected flat and corroded batteries, but the bulb came as a shock. This from a raft which had been sold as "dry stored". All the other equipment was ok, though there isn't much that could have gone wrong with it.

Has anyone else done this with an old raft at all? And what happened?
 
i pulled the cord on a old avon last year and nothing happend at all exsept it burnt well when i threw it on the fire we had going and yes the bottle as well as it was so rusty the top had broke off !!
 
hi yes i got my boat and there was one with it , i had a look at last test date ????? wow 1946 . this was 1993 . any way me and son desided to throw it over side and see what would happen , it went off ok in ten million p:ices. we picked up all crap ,, did get nice knife ..quoite and rope 8 tins of water . s.mirro. small compus . first aid kit fishing gear all in good order and g s what still got them .plus container it all came in /forums/images/graemlins/laugh.gif
 
We also inflated a very old liferaft we inherited with our boat - hadn't been serviced for about 6 years - in inflated OK but all the seams were coming apart and it leaked at the relief valve. We skipped it, but did rescue the knife and some cord.
 
In the 1970's a family friend inherited a liferaft from a B-17 Flying Fortress.

I understand that The 12 man liferaft inflated most impressively. Lots of stuff was supplied to keep the downed fliers happy. Amongst the star finds where 200 Lucky Strikes per man, Zippo lighters, stockings, presumably for trade with the natives and about 6 gross of condoms.
 
As a matter of interest, what make was it, was it a "budget" raft, and most important, was it in a valise or canister? I have always thought that rafts not vacuum packed in a GRP canister, especially those made of PVC rather than butyl rubber are liable to rot and the seams crack after a few years. Seen lots of valise packed ones condemned after about 7 years but mostly more expensive ones in good GRP canisters last longer. Just interested to know....
 
Maybe a rolled up inflatable and a scared man with a footpump would be the safer option after all, at least for coastal cruising.

I know it was poo poo'd on here recently but I am not so sure. Mind you the swindleries wouldn't do so well then and it isn't a very PC option.

On the recent Jester challenge I may be wrong, but am fairly sure one of them had one on their coachroof as their liferaft.
 
I mentioned this thread to a friend of mine who services liferafts and he told me this,
These have all been found in the last 5 weeks



1 BFA Raft “in date” serviced at non approved service agent, but due mods, packed upside down completely.



2 Raft 2 years out of date, completely empty gas cylinder.



3 Plastimo raft, firing head on hand tight only, most gas would escape if activated.



4 Plastimo raft ,serviced at non approved service agent, serviced as per schedule, would NOT HAVE WORKED AT ALL. Firing head should have been modified but was not and would not activate at all.



5 Plastimo raft, serviced at non approved service agent, still in date for a further 2.5 years but was damaged in transit so needed to be redone. Time expired food rations found inside. Black plastic straps on the outside were not approved type which is designed to snap at a certain load, but were pallet strapping which stretches and stretches, and dosen't 'snap'

Frightening that we would only find these things out at the wrong time unless we share these tales.

Al.
 
Scares the poo out of me. If you buy an 'in-date' raft on ebay, you takes yer chances, but Critical safety equipment you just cannot take any chances with.

I did buy the raft at a RNLI supported boat jumble for a few quid, so I wasn't really going to use it, more as a toy for the kids. So I was pleasantly surprised when it exploded into life, but the raft had been serviced until storage. As a serviced raft, it ought to work. It should not have a poorly seated top up valve, and it absolutely shouldn't have any leaks.

There ought to be statutory regulation on liferaft servicing. I'm not sure there is, beyond the usual trading laws.
 
The trouble is that, as someone said in an earlier thread, customers of badly serviced or badly made liferafts tend not to come back and complain...

Which? did a test on garages several years ago, taking cars in with or without faults. From memory there were 3 out of 150 garages that got all the faults and didn't charge for unnecessary repairs.

Time perhaps for PBO to do the same with liferaft servicing? And screw anyone who gets it badly wrong in the courts. EG, charging for new flares and not putting them in is theft. Charge the ba$tards with theft & give 'em a criminal record. Take away the acreditation of incompetent or negligent servicers - all with lots of publicity.
 

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