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spectr17
01-05-2007, 10:28 AM
ACR Leads U.S. In PLB Sales

PLB Registrations Increase Dramatically in 2006

Note: In the wake of the recent tragedy of lost climbers on Mount Hood, public interest in safety and survival has focused on technological advances that may have assisted in the location and rescue efforts. Satellite-detectable Personal Locator Beacons (PLBs) are proving to be valuable emergency life-saving devices for outdoor activities of all kinds. A dramatic increase in PLB registrations in the U.S. last year indicates a growing popularity and consumer interest in these rescue beacons, especially among hunters, campers, hikers, climbers, skiers and boaters.

Quick Facts

Following an experimental pilot PLB program in Alaska, which resulted in many lives saved over the course of a seven-year period, PLBs have become highly visible to the public since July 2003 when the FCC authorized them by rule for use in the U.S.A. PLBs perform the same function as an Emergency Position Indicating Radio Beacon (EPIRB) but are smaller and lighter. Advances in PLB technology include the addition of a GPS receiver which make alerting and location and, subsequently rescue, faster than ever before.

PLBs and EPIRBs transmit signals on internationally recognized distress frequencies. The 406 MHz signal is monitored by NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) and the Search and Rescue Satellite-Aided Tracking System (SARSAT) detects and locates distress signals. GPS coordinates greatly assist search and rescue crews.

In 2006, there was an increase from the previous year of almost 2,000 PLB registrations with NOAA. In 2006, there were 7,949 PLB registrations for a total of 18,060 PLB registrations in the U.S. database to date. More than half, 11,472, are ACR PLBs. To date in 2006, NOAA has reported PLBs have assisted in the rescue of 35 people in 20 incidents in the U.S.

U.S.-based ACR Electronics, Inc., www.acrelectronics.com (http://www.acrelectronics.com/), manufactures and distributes the TerraFix, AquaFix and AeroFix PLB brands. ACR is the leading manufacturer of PLBs and EPIRBs in the U.S. More than 50 percent of the 151,477 satellite-detectable beacons registered in America today are made by ACR Electronics, according to NOAA Satellite and Information Service.

Worldwide, the Cospas-Sarsat 406 MHz satellite system is credited with rescuing 20,300 people since the program¹s inception in 1982. Of that number, 5,381 persons were rescued in the U.S.

Recent Related Story Links:

http://www.katu.com/news/team2/4963196.html
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion...pinionfront-hed (http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/chi-0612220173dec22,1,7085727.story?coll=chi-opinionfront-hed) http://www.redding.com/news/2006/dec/24/th...heir-own-lives/ (http://www.redding.com/news/2006/dec/24/thrill-seekers-risk-more-than-their-own-lives/)http://www.startribune.com/561/story/889108.html
http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2006/12/1...-in-cyberspace/ (http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2006/12/13/tracing-a-climbers-footprints-in-cyberspace/)http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/061221/20061221005912.html?.v=1
http://cbs4.com/video/?id=27380@wfor.dayport.com


PLB Rescue Snapshots

· The first recorded rescue from an ACR AquaFix PLB activation occurred off the west coast of Florida when two recreational scuba divers got separated from their boat. One diver decided to swim alone to the boat and was picked up by a passing boater. Once aboard his vessel, he discovered that his VHF radio was out of range and set off his AquaFix. Within one hour, the U.S. Coast Guard rescuers arrived and began search patterns for the drifting diver. They saw her strobe light in the distance and picked her up. They were rejoined safely on their boat and they motored home.

· A solo canoeist on a three-month trip on the Yukon River in remote British Colombia found himself in a situation with no way out. He flipped his canoe in near-freezing water and was flowing rapidly down the river. He eventually located shallow water, but his hands were numb, he was fatigued and spitting up blood. He decided his life was in peril, and set-off his ACR 406 PLB and awaited help. Within four and a half hours, rescuers located him and delivered him to a nursing station where he was examined and released.

· The COSPAS-SARSAT system detected a 406 MHz EPIRB distress signal in the Florida Everglades. An air boater had become stuck in the vast swamp. Night was approaching and the presence of alligators motivated him to manually activate his PLB. A Coast Guard helicopter located him and directed Florida Fish and Wildlife officers in an airboat to him. The authorities enlisted nearby air boaters to help lead him back to safety.

· A disabled snowmobiler, 20 miles from Barrow, Alaska, enabled his PLB and enlisted help from the COSPAS-SARSAT system. Alaska State Troopers located and rescued the man.

· In November 2005, a New York man on a solo sailing trip from Rhode Island to Virginia ran into weather, so violent that it rolled his 34-foot vessel three times. With conditions deteriorating, mast broken, no power, no one in sight and 260 miles northwest of Bermuda, he activated his AquaFix P-EPIRB. Three hours later he was spotted by a U.S. Coast Guard C-130, responding to the rescue call. The Coast Guard directed two shipping vessels to his position to complete the rescue.

* A private pilot employed as a fish spotter for fishing boats ditched his crippled plane in the Pacific Ocean 10 miles off Malibu, California. After sending out a radio mayday, he quickly exited the swiftly sinking single-engine plane and activated the AquaFix that he wore around his neck. While awaiting rescue, he set off flares and within minutes, an aircraft spotted him and the Coast Guard plucked him out of the ocean. · In 2006, four 19-year-old hikers became the first people to be rescued on land, outside of Alaska, by a TerraFix406 MHz GPS PLB. Three of the hikers had fallen into a swollen creek while on a six-day backcountry hike in Washington State.

The youth were wet, had damp gear and had no means to build a fire. The temperature was 45 degrees with non-stop rain and gale winds. When hypothermia began to set in, they turned on their rental TerraFix PLB which resulted in a successful rescue. Having critical knowledge of the teens¹ location minimized the expense of operating the helicopter and the efforts of the park rangers. Alternative scenarios to the outcome of this accident include the possibility of a multi-day, large-scale search at significant expense to the public. The parents rented the PLB for their son because they realized a GPS unit alone would not alert someone if help was needed.

* A woman climber fell and sustained serious head injuries while hiking and alpine climbing with her family in Southern Utah. Her brother, a physician, determined that her situation was grave and imminent, and activated his TerraFix406 GPS PLB. Two forest rangers assisted by calling 911 on their cell phone. The police, who received notification and GPS coordinates courtesy of the SARSAT system monitored by NOAA, dispatched a SAR team toairlift her to a trauma hospital. The physician had purchased the TerraFix

Backcountry
01-05-2007, 11:14 AM
All the PLBs and EPIRBs in the world wouldn't have saved the climbers in Oregon. The rescuers pretty much knew where those guys were right from the git go, but it was simply too hazardous to complete a rescue mission until it was too late.

On the other hand, the Kim family could have turned a 9+ day fatal misadventure on an Oregon logging road into a chilly, embarassing overnighter if they would have had a PLB or EPIRB.

Nothing to do it about it now, but I imagine a few more folks will keep those with them in their vehicles, just in case.

For what it's worth, I'll be renting a small sat phone in the future to test for use on solo backcountry trips. Apparently they have been reduced in size to about the size of a large cell phone, and weigh less than a pound. If those work as advertised that is probably a better option for most folks. Most situations I can see myself getting in (e.g., leg wound while skinning a la Arrowslinger or Kentuck; or maybe a stuck truck a la Speckmisser), I'd rather be able to have some control over why who gets sent where and when they get sent, rather than just turning the PLB on and waiting for the military, NASA, Coast Guard, local S&R, the media, and who knows who else to show up.

http://www.jesseshunting.com/forums/style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/smiley-faces-toast-beers.gif BC

p.s. Props to AS, Kentuck, and Speckmisser for providing canon fodder... http://www.jesseshunting.com/forums/style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/smiley-wedgie.gif

Backcountry
01-05-2007, 11:19 AM
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE </div>
· The COSPAS-SARSAT system detected a 406 MHz EPIRB distress signal in the Florida Everglades. An air boater had become stuck in the vast swamp. Night was approaching and the presence of alligators motivated him to manually activate his PLB. A Coast Guard helicopter located him and directed Florida Fish and Wildlife officers in an airboat to him. The authorities enlisted nearby air boaters to help lead him back to safety.[/b]
I&#39;m sorry, but this one I don&#39;t buy... a redneck in a swamp is about as at-home as a fish in a pond. Airboaters are rednecks (show me a Greenpeacer in a airboat and I&#39;ll eat my words), and rednecks ain&#39;t skeered of gators... when Rednecks are in the middle of a swamp at night with no one around they use gators as target practice. Plain and simple, that guy was out of beer!

Gyopo
01-05-2007, 12:16 PM
I guess the POLB is one of those "better to have and not need, than to need and not have" items.

Hopefully people will not use PLBs, Sat phones, etc as anexcuse/beer muscle for doing knuckleheaded thing.

Not to change subjects, but....
Arrowslinger cuuting himself, I know of.
Speckmisser sliping and sliding, I vaguely recall.

Kentuck going Hari Kiri on his leg, new to me.
I gotta know the details.
I hope I didn&#39;t just jinx myself.

Backcountry
01-05-2007, 12:29 PM
I can&#39;t find the original post, but here&#39;s a recent reference and a pic...

http://www.jesseshunting.com/forums/index....mp;#entry789477 (http://www.jesseshunting.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=128897&st=0&p=789477&#entry789477)

http://www.jesseshunting.com/forums/uploads/post-409-1165623481.jpg

Backcountry
01-05-2007, 12:34 PM
Found it... don&#39;t try dat at home...

http://www.jesseshunting.com/forums/index....showtopic=85566 (http://www.jesseshunting.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=85566)

Gyopo
01-07-2007, 09:13 PM
Thanks for the link.

I would have try to make a "he charged me and all I had were my bare hands" story.

He looks to be smiling so I guess he is ok.

Speckmisser
01-08-2007, 07:45 AM
I received a PLB for Christmas a couple of years ago, after I finished up an article about the units. My girlfriend saw the research, and met with the fella from ACR with me during one of the interviews. Once she learned what this thing did, it was a no-brainer that I&#39;d be getting one.

It&#39;s been sitting quietly in my big-game pack since I got it, and if things go well, that&#39;s where it&#39;ll stay. I don&#39;t ever want to have to activate it. But if I ever do, there is no tool in my kit that I&#39;d rather have.

They&#39;re not inexpensive, but a PLB could quite literally be a lifesaver.

A lot of the places we hunt in the west don&#39;t offer much in the way of cell phone coverage. Radios are limited as well, since they are also line-of-sight and while you might have five or six miles range from the top of a ridge... when you get to the bottom of the draw sometimes you can&#39;t even communicate with someone a quarter mile away.


Of course the best recommendation is to always be safe. Hunt with a buddy (or more). Always leave someone a plan of where you&#39;ll be and when you&#39;ll be home. All of that stuff is still critical. But if all of that fails, and it does occasionally, a PLB can spell the difference between being coyote food or coming home to the people who love and depend on you.

How&#39;s that for an advertisement? http://www.jesseshunting.com/forums/style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/smiley-hitting-self.gif

Seriously, if you spend time in the backcountry, especially in places where a cell phone doesn&#39;t work, it&#39;s something you should really consider. Prices are coming down (mine was about $600 three years ago), and the features and functionality are increasing.

One Track
01-08-2007, 02:24 PM
PLB or Sat Phone?

betelgeuse
01-08-2007, 04:18 PM
I hope people don&#39;t start abusing these things and setting them off when their tent leaks on a camping trip.

Home alarms are so abused that in some cities police have stopped responding to them, or fine people who abuse them.

If someone has little experience in the outdoors they may panic in situations that may not be life threatening.

Also like Gyopo said, I hope it doesn&#39;t stop people from being prepared or give them artificial courage.

It&#39;s probably good that they are kind of expensive. People who know the value will probably spend the money.

That being said, I am considering getting one for fishing offshore and when hunting alone in remote areas.

Zbearclaw
01-08-2007, 08:21 PM
I would rather rent a sat phone than pay for the PLB, but that is just me.

Will the Coast Guard carry your kill out for you if you lite off the PLB, in that case maybe I will change my tune, just kidding of course.

Speckmisser
01-09-2007, 05:54 PM
Sat phone is a good option too. In the long run, it&#39;d be more expensive (if you spend any time in the field) to use the Sat phone, though. Pay once for the PLB, keep it registered, and you&#39;re set.

And yes, people are already abusing emergency services (e.g. 911) and there will be some yo-yos who use the PLB in non-emergency situations. However... EPIRBS have been in use on recreational vessels for several years now, and the abuse rate has been relatively low.

7mm RM
01-13-2007, 01:57 PM
Good info, thanks http://www.jesseshunting.com/forums/style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/smiley-jhp-rocks.gif

Kentuck
01-18-2007, 06:08 PM
I don&#39;t read this forum for a couple of weeks and look what happens. I get to a poster boy for PLB&#39;s. Go figure. At least now all my hunting buddies help with field dressing my kills! HA! At least some of the feeling is returning to that part of the leg.

Wogg
01-18-2007, 08:59 PM
So is your knife known as a Kentuck sticker now? lol

As for the Sat phones, we received a memo the other day about the Sat phones that we use at work and they are saying that some of there satelites are going to be down for a while. I see if I can post up the info and the company name.

slickhntr
02-01-2007, 10:59 AM
PLB&#39;s are getting cheaper...I think it is a good idea to have one in your pack