mhouse
Well-Known Member
And it is always the same boats .
Drummed into my as a young person, turn your radio on, check you can transmit and receive as the day you don't Sods Law will haunt you...
I don't think there is a NCI station in Cardigan Bay. Are all the stations on Ch 68? .
I use a radio in my job for over 20 years, never happened!Is there another law that says the press key will eventually fail due to excessive radio checking?
Exactly. It’s a vital piece of safety equipment.
When out I often press the DSC alert. It’s reassuring to see the helicopter circling overhead and I usually give them a cheery wave to thank them for their vigilance.
They often wave back...
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If it doesn't work you'll fix it... (or invoke plan B). It does concern me that there may not be a plan B.I've never understood the logic behind radio checks (if there is any logic). The fact that it works one moment doesn't mean it'll work a moment later. So why bother?
Yes - better to check for the loose wire now than with 18inches of water round your ankles. But I do wonder how many will then still head out without it - in which case it might somewhat defeat the purpose.Because if it doesn't work when the check is done then there is the opportunity to investigate at what might be a more convenient time. I would rather find out something is not working at a time of my choosing rather than when I actually need to use it.
Does anyone use the DSC capability of their vhf radio? Program the mmsi number of your nearest coastguard station into your set, then when you want a radio check select that entry, then ‘routine’, hit transmit and wait for them to call you on 67 when they’re free. No clogging up ch16. And it familiarises yourself with the less than intuitive use of DSC (why couldn’t they have made it more like a mobile phone?)
Receiving is far easier than sendingmy car radio fires up when turned on, so why is a vhf set any different
It is. It doesn't test the voice component... but if the voice bit is broken and the red button still works you should get help...Am I the only one who uses the DSC "Test" function to a CG MMSI? I understood the response was automatic.
Possibly, every switch has a finite life. But unused switches also fail due to corrosion on the contacts. The buttons on my keyboard get hit far far more than the PTT... ...I expect a keyboard at work to last 5-7 years and probably type 10,000 words a month, so 600,000 words + in the lifetime. (the letters will have rubbed off E before then!) Thats at least 120,000 presses of a vowel. 600,000 presses of space bar. So 328 years of a once daily press...Is there another law that says the press key will eventually fail due to excessive radio checking?
My mobile phone does its own testing - it tells me which network it is on, what signal strength I have. It is doing that by communicating with the mast and the mast communicating back. It does't promise the mic is working etc.I wonder how many of those folk requesting radio checks make a call from their mobile phone every morning just to make sure it is working!
AyeIf I'm going offshore, I report into the Coastguard with my passage plan. That's effectively my radio check.
But the masts weren't moved were they?Since the closure of the coastguard station at Fife Ness, A friend sailing form the forth tells me he has never had a response to a request for a radio check. Aberdeen Port Control, however, are happy to respond.
You don't need to test 999 calls. Your phone connects to the network (on a mobile you can see it does)... ...the 999 system self tests its self constantly, and has backup systems in place in case it fails.This is great advice. I often check a number of other safety critical items, including routine 999 calls, emergency stops on motorways (need to have confidence in my brakes) and the sounding of the emergency alarm every time I board a train.
When we were at cold war - did we not test these things regularly? Just like fire alarms are tested regularly. Modern fire alarms have multiple testing systems build in, but in critical places ==> tested audibly weekly.Following on from the recent event in Hawaii, I think that regular Nuclear Warnings should be issued as well, just to keep everyone on their toes.
Do you transmit on your car radio?
If it doesn't work you'll fix it... (or invoke plan B). It does concern me that there may not be a plan B.
...If it doesn't work you'll fix it... (or invoke plan B). It does concern me that there may not be a plan ...
I think most of us have a plan B in the form of a handheld.
But on that basis testing anything that has a binary state of "works" or "doesn't work" is pointless?But my comment was logical and relevant: the fact that a VHF radio works one moment doesn't mean it'll work a moment later. So in reality the radio check is pointless.
In which case you presumably don't leave the harbour. But do people not leave simply because the VHF isn't working?Unless your plan 'B' is to make sure plan 'A' works!
Presumably having a working VHF is quite important on a venture like that. But also presumably you didn't test as you left the harbour...having done a failed radio check with a neighbouring boat just about to set sail to the Caribbean.
Which I suspect is actually relatively normal...I don't think anyone minds an operator carrying out a radio check at appproprate intervals. It's just that checking doesn't mean you have to clog up channel 16,
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In practice, usually my check isn't a special readio check call, it's a routine essential call to port operations for clearance or a ship to ship to another yacht I know when it pops up on AIS.