RobbieW
Well-Known Member
...I know of no dual frequency Radar transponders either....
http://www.echomax.co.uk/radar-target-enhancers-x-band-dual-band.html - been in production around 10 years
...I know of no dual frequency Radar transponders either....
Don't disregard the power of prayer ... no less effective than most passive reflectors and much cheaper.
And if the rules (of wherever I was sailing) required a radar reflector, tape a Plastimo one to the front of the mast a few meters up.
Ah, but which god to pray to?
Am I the only one seeing the logical flaw in that?
I filled a bucket with seawater, there were no fish in it so I concluded there are no fish in the sea.Am I the only one seeing the logical flaw in that?
Well spotted. I think we all accept a degree of risk or we wouldn't sail. If I were to eliminate all risks, I wouldn't be able to afford to do it.I assumed it was intended to be nicely ironic.
http://www.echomax.co.uk/radar-target-enhancers-x-band-dual-band.html - been in production around 10 years
See link on #12. Having read that article some years ago I fitted an Echomax dual band on our last boat - a 22 foot trailer sailer that we used to cross the Channel at the narrow bit.
Thanks for that, it's new to me! Apparently SeaMe is also dual band. Both still need fed with electrickery though.
Do the rules specify a minimum standard,if so can you post a link plsThe small Plasitimo one simly doesn't work, and that fact is widely known and promulgated, so by fittig it you would not comply with any rules in the UK at least. It might pass a rule in France I suppose.
The interesting legal point is whether there is any requirement in the UK to comply with any rules at all if one's boat is small enough. The legislation is explicit in stating that there are no mandated requirements for equipment aboard if less than 13.7m length. But it's also clear that one nonetheless has to comply with Solas V whatever the size, and Solas requires various capabilities, including a radar reflector if practicable. These two are in conflict and thus would be tested by the courts were a prosecution to be brought following an accident. My guess - purely that - is that a skipper stands a strong chance of being judged to have been negligent were he to have not carried the sort of safety equipment, including reflector of a sensible size, which is typical aboard his sort of yacht.
Thus by the back-door as it were I think that the UK does have a pretty much mandatory set of safety equipment, whether one likes it or not.
Do the rules specify a minimum standard,if so can you post a link pls
And the answer is what Vic