russ
Well-Known Member
I am getting the kit together ready for taking my boat from river use to coastal use.
Which type of flares or flare pack would you recommend buying?
Which type of flares or flare pack would you recommend buying?
Depends on what sort of distance from shore you intend to be..... Coastal or offshore flare pack
I am getting the kit together ready for taking my boat from river use to coastal use.
Which type of flares or flare pack would you recommend buying?
I'm planning on an SFA* pack. I've got an EPIRB, two DSC radios, and there are flares in the life raft, I don't see the point of having even more explosives on board.
* Sweet FA
I've removed all the flares from our boat. They are a 19th century solution and IMHO constitute more of a risk in the untrained hands of leisure crews than a safety benefit. They are to all practical purposes small explosives and recent accidents suggest they may be more harm than good when used by untrained leisure crew. There have been enough flare related accidents, injuries and boat fires over the past decade to suggest safer alternatives especially with low cost electronics now widely available (eg EPIRBs, PLBs, DSC VHF, HH devices, lasers, etc). PLBs in particular get off a distress signal anywhere on the globe, with position and local homing, and don't have to be visually noticed unlike flares. EPRIB/PLB will transmit for at least 48hrs unlike the transient nature of a flare. Combine with DSC VHF fixed and HH and you have multiple redundancy.
I'm afraid I can't agree with any of that. The GMDSS system is great for some things and awful for others. The transmitting of PLBs for example are almost universally ignored on the bridges of ships and other stations unless their backed up by other means such as a radio transmission as there are literally hundreds of these alarms a day caused by things falling into the water. You should always have a means to communicate distress that does not require batteries or generators as you never know when you will lose both. As you are also taught in survival classes. Things such as smoke floats are a huge aid to helicopter crews and rescuers as the help visually mark the casualty and show wind direction. At five hundred feet above a stormy sea the chopper crews will struggle to find you even if they can see your PLB or EPIRB ping on a radar screen. They won't miss a flare which is why commercial ships must have a Perry Float life ring with a smoke float attached. A white yacht in a white sea is very hard to see from a ship or lifeboat at the same height.
Propellors are another 19th century marine solution to a problem. None of the new fangled alternatives have yet to supersede them. Concern about untrained use is probably best addresed by training.
... oilskins?
I'm afraid I can't agree with any of that. The GMDSS system is great for some things and awful for others. The transmitting of PLBs for example are almost universally ignored on the bridges of ships and other stations unless their backed up by other means such as a radio transmission as there are literally hundreds of these alarms a day caused by things falling into the water. You should always have a means to communicate distress that does not require batteries or generators as you never know when you will lose both. As you are also taught in survival classes. Things such as smoke floats are a huge aid to helicopter crews and rescuers as the help visually mark the casualty and show wind direction. At five hundred feet above a stormy sea the chopper crews will struggle to find you even if they can see your PLB or EPIRB ping on a radar screen. They won't miss a flare which is why commercial ships must have a Perry Float life ring with a smoke float attached. A white yacht in a white sea is very hard to see from a ship or lifeboat at the same height.
Propellors are another 19th century marine solution to a problem. None of the new fangled alternatives have yet to supersede them. Concern about untrained use is probably best addresed by training.
I have only set one off at RNLI open day, and that was enough to put me off the things for ever. It also seems hit and miss.. you just hope someone is about to see it...hmm,, pretty much the end of the line then.I've removed all the flares from our boat. They are a 19th century solution and IMHO constitute more of a risk in the untrained hands of leisure crews than a safety benefit. They are to all practical purposes small explosives and recent accidents suggest they may be more harm than good when used by untrained leisure crew. There have been enough flare related accidents, injuries and boat fires over the past decade to suggest safer alternatives especially with low cost electronics now widely available (eg EPIRBs, PLBs, DSC VHF, HH devices, lasers, etc). PLBs in particular get off a distress signal anywhere on the globe, with position and local homing, and don't have to be visually noticed unlike flares. EPRIB/PLB will transmit for at least 48hrs unlike the transient nature of a flare. Combine with DSC VHF fixed and HH and you have multiple redundancy.
But you describe non-leisure boating scenarios. PLBs do not activate when they "fall in" and they are not ignored by global sat monitoring stations. One has to cater for the actual lowest common denominator. Many of today's leisure boaters are no longer experienced nor adequately trained yachtsmen and women, and that is the practical reality today and likely in the future. Modern SAR helicopters have wind instrumentation no longer depending on smoke flares for indication of surface wind direction. Agree one good use for smoke flares is in crowded close proximity traffic when a casualty vessel can be more quickly picked out from a large fleet. But IMHO rockets are obsolete and dangerous in the hands of many of todays inexperienced leisure users. As I said VHF augments PLBs and EPIRBs so one is not depending on one means. It makes no logical sense to discredit a dependancy on electronics, as we all depend 100% on same every time we fly commercially.
The transmitting of PLBs for example are almost universally ignored on the bridges of ships
[...]
chopper crews will struggle to find you even if they can see your PLB or EPIRB ping on a radar screen.
Ye pays yer money and takes yer chance!
Personally I would not put out to sea without a basic pyro set.
Would you drive around in your car all the time with a large pack of powerful fireworks in the boot?
Not very likely to smash your boat on the rocks, or sink, either ...No but then I can get out of my car in the event of a breakdown and walk to the nearest phone. The road is also not likely to pick up my car and smash it against the nearest rocks over and over nor will I likely sink beneath the road and suffocate should I get out.
No but then I can get out of my car in the event of a breakdown and walk to the nearest phone. The road is also not likely to pick up my car and smash it against the nearest rocks over and over nor will I likely sink beneath the road and suffocate should I get out.
the risk of such devices in a car is very dangerous.