prv
Well-Known Member
Hey I claim patent on the above![]()
Actually you've just done the opposite
Pete
Hey I claim patent on the above![]()
AIS goes off the instant the device goes in the water and the PLB only triggers say an hour later.
Would wake up the off duty crew, if they hadn't got you back in the first hour then time to call in the big boys.
Oh well.....that's us single-handers 'dead in the water'.
Vic
Bit confused here. Is Kannad & McMurdo now the same company or, are they 2 entirely separate companies sharing (with exterior differences) the same product?
Kannad Marine is a brand of McMurdo Ltd, born out of the acquisition of Kannad SAS of France, and McMurdo Ltd of England, by the Orolia Group (NYSE Alternext Paris – FR0010501015 – ALORO), a high-technology group specializing in precise Positioning, Navigation and Timing in 2009. Established in 1937, McMurdo Ltd leads the way in the development and manufacture of emergency location beacons and related products.
I take it that's a bit tongue in cheek after all the mention of night crews and on-shift/off-shift crews?![]()
AIS Beacon?
If sailing in crowded waters during the day, a day/night flare would be much easier to find than an AIS contact. At night a strobe light and a day/night.
If in remote waters a PLB + day/night and strobe at night.
I wear a day/night and PLB in my lifejacket at work and am not bothered that I have a pyro under my armpit. Much rather it was there than not.
It was the suggestion that the PLB activation should be delayed by an hour that triggered my comment.
Vic
Around the same price as a PLB Seajet. So far the offerings i'm aware of are the Smartfind S10, and the Kannad Safelink R10.
Snooks,
ta, but this EasyRescue is then approx £110 more than the S10 & R10, and unlike those doesn't seem to have a light, which I'd think invaluable for final approach to the casualty ?...
I can confirm that some of the latest EPIRB's give a GPS position when activated.
It's these sorts of real conditions test that the magazines need to do. Not someone jumping over in flat seas.
Who do they give this GPS position to?
EPIRBs at the moment obviously give their position to the rescue services when triggered so I'm not sure what the GPS facility adds to the equation unless it's giving a GPS position to nearby ships or something?
Richard
But they are not likely to do that are they ?? Might just expose any weakness & failings in the system, which would effect sales. And to do so might cause the manufacturers to reduce
or cut their advertising budget with said magazine.
Do PLB' Tx the same as a Class B AIS ? What is the time period between transmissions ?
Looks like just another gadget thats been developed with sales in mind.
If & when they are proven in all conditions I will consider buying one.