You may want to check into the legality of
using a marine EPIRB in an aircraft. Contact your local FSDO to determine
if it satisfies the requirements of 91.207. When you buy an EPIRB there’s
a registration card that you need to fill out and return that indicated the
owner, contact information and the type of vessel in which the unit is being
installed. If the unit is for marine use, aircraft will not be one of the
choices. If you want something to supplement the ELT you may want to
check into a PLB (Personal Locator Beacon). These are typically sold at
outdoors and sporting goods shops. These are intended for hikers and
other outdoors type activities. Get one of these and put it in your
flight bag or first aid kit just in case. Activating one of these will
trigger a similar scenario as an ELT.
If you do get a unit that transmits on
406MHz, make sure it also broadcasts on 121.5 or 243. If you don’t,
the SAR resource that will most likely come to your aid, CAP (Civil Air
Patrol), will be unable to home in on your signal. Their airborne and
ground equipment is only capable of receiving on 121.5 or 243. They will
have to rely on the lat/lon that was received from the EPIRB when it was
activated (it does have an internal GPS doesn’t it?) as a starting point
for the search patterns. If you activate it in the air, they may be
searching in the wrong place, especially if you travel any appreciable distance
before you contact the ground. On the ground in a heavily wooded area, it’s
quite easy to miss a downed aircraft even from 100 feet away.
To get an idea of what’s happening
on the receiving end of the signal, see the links below.
http://level2.cap.gov/documents/u_081503135122.pdf
http://www.cap.gov/visitors/members/operations/operations_training/aircrew_flightline/
Especially the aircrew
training slides and reference text.
For actual crash site
pictures, see the mission scanner presentation, slides 193-224.
http://www.cap.gov/visitors/members/operations/operations_training/index.cfm?nodeID=5308
How the ground teams
prepare and what they’re doing to find you.
Another suggestion would be to contact
your nearest CAP squadron. Ask them about what to do in case of an
unplanned off-airport landing (AKA: crash) so as to increase the likelihood of surviving
and being found.
Raymond Balister
L-ES
-----Original Message-----
From: marv@lancair.net
[mailto:marv@lancair.net]
Sent: Wednesday,
March 14, 2007 11:21 AM
To: lml@lancaironline.net
Subject: Re: [LML] Re: EPIRB vs.
ELT
Posted
for "terrence o'neill" <troneill@charter.net>:
Matt,
While lurking I read your comments on EPIRBs. I have to find something this
month to wire into N211AL with the EFIS and GPS etc. Reluctant to buy the
old ELT tech that will soon be obsolete. The new 406 MHz stuff is still
coming down in price ... what about a personal or maritime beacon plus an ELT
in the meantime? The 406 prices should be lower at OSH... Pros and
cons?
Something basis but with GPS?
Terrence O'Neill
L235/320