yeah, I like that it can last more time unlike flare gun...That's pretty cool. Would be really handy in forested areas.
Back when cell phones were not tjst good, coverage and technogy-wise, my mountain hike emergency kit contained the following items, among other things:Came across this emergency device, find it very interesting, what do you guys think?
Same. I guarantee that design would attract help faster too. At least from pilots...View attachment 136048I thought thread was about this SOS balloon.
Dang. Beat me too it!I thought thread was about this SOS balloon.
And it assumes that you are capable of using it all once you have crashed. People are often incapacitated and are stuck in the airplane with two broken legs or a broken back or are unconscious. This is why the ELT was invented: it will activate (it's supposed to activate) and will transmit the distress signal even if you are dead. Newer ELTS are a lot more reliable than the earlier 121.5 models, and a lot more reliable than expecting a pilot or passenger to find and operate emergency equipment.Today your phone will give you GPS position, as well as a modest strobe light capability and you can use it as a decent mirror if needed. Make sure to bring a power bank with you, maybe one with a solar panel.
That and an aviation band handheld radio will get you out of trouble faster than almost anything else.
This is why I'm fan of a PLB (which you'd activate prior to touchdown) to compliment an ELT. I have an ACR one that I keep on my boat, but grab and put in my pocket anytime I fly somewhere remote which is rare. Even then I'm IFR 99% of the time so talking to ATC who should have a pretty good idea of my location if something were to happen.And it assumes that you are capable of using it all once you have crashed. People are often incapacitated and are stuck in the airplane with two broken legs or a broken back or are unconscious. This is why the ELT was invented: it will activate (it's supposed to activate) and will transmit the distress signal even if you are dead. Newer ELTS are a lot more reliable than the earlier 121.5 models, and a lot more reliable than expecting a pilot or passenger to find and operate emergency equipment.
In the forest, the airplane can go down and the trees close back over it. No balloon is going to find its way out, and even a ten-foot balloon would be hard to spot if it got altitude. The two-foot balloon in that video is just about invisible from a searcher's point of view, and the wind would whip it around and puncture it on the trees.
Yes, those balls are bigger, up to four and a half feet across, are out in the open, and still can be hard to spot from any distance.Nothing that can't be fixed with bigger balls:
View attachment 136054
You can fire a 406 before crashing, too. A remote switch in the panel is part of the mandatory installation stuff. But neither that or your ACR will work if the VFR pilot flies into IMC and the cloud has granite in it, as is so often the case in mountainous country.This is why I'm fan of a PLB (which you'd activate prior to touchdown) to compliment an ELT. I have an ACR one that I keep on my boat, but grab and put in my pocket anytime I fly somewhere remote which is rare. Even then I'm IFR 99% of the time so talking to ATC who should have a pretty good idea of my location if something were to happen.
But neither that or your ACR will work if the VFR pilot flies into IMC and the cloud has granite in it,
Same as the balloon. A life jacket or mylar blanket will have the same limitations. And there have been enough cases wjere the ELT didn't operate as intended, for various reasons.And it assumes that you are capable of using it all once you have crashed.
Early in my training I was taught that the most dangerous cloud type was the cumulogranite.Never quite heard it put that way.
Is it made in China.??Came across this emergency device, find it very interesting, what do you guys think?
Ouch!Is it made in China.??
How many people have been saved by an ELT (that wouldn't have been saved without it)?And it assumes that you are capable of using it all once you have crashed. People are often incapacitated and are stuck in the airplane with two broken legs or a broken back or are unconscious. This is why the ELT was invented: it will activate (it's supposed to activate) and will transmit the distress signal even if you are dead. Newer ELTS are a lot more reliable than the earlier 121.5 models, and a lot more reliable than expecting a pilot or passenger to find and operate emergency equipment.
In the forest, the airplane can go down and the trees close back over it. No balloon is going to find its way out, and even a ten-foot balloon would be hard to spot if it got altitude. The two-foot balloon in that video is just about invisible from a searcher's point of view, and the wind would whip it around and puncture it on the trees.
View attachment 136050
View attachment 136051
Or InReach, which is, like spidertracks, on Iridium. I would never trust spot for SAR.The Spot or Spidertracks stuff is a better bet than a handheld PLB, IMHO.
I can't find any hard numbers there. Some numbers for 2023, from https://www.noaa.gov/news-release/noaa-satellites-helped-save-350-lives-in-2023How many people have been saved by an ELT (that wouldn't have been saved without it)?
From what I understand, SAR can and does triangulate/home on your cellphone signal nowadays, so that 15 year old quote is a bit dated.I remember reading an article maybe 15 years ago about annual ELT maintenance. The author admitted that ELTs have many failure modes including sinking, destruction by fire, being scattered across a rock face along with the rest of the airplane and its occupants, or having its antenna torn of or buried in the dirt. But, he said, suppose you make a fairly successful forced landing in the trees, but are hidden by them. Your ELT was not maintained and didn't work and no amount of fooling with it will wake it up because its battery is shot or has leaked and corroded everything inside. You see SAR aircraft flying around looking for you. They make a couple of passes a few miles apart. You try to signal with your emergency mirror. You try to start a smoky fire real quick. Nothing works. You realize, once the airplanes stop coming around, that you have sold your life for the price of an annual ELT test and inspection.
I think 45 meters (148 feet) isn't near enough string for the Cascade Mountains. Many of those trees are over 200 feet (61 meters) tall.Came across this emergency device, find it very interesting, what do you guys think?