PLBs are cheaper. For the average Joe with a small boat, it's pretty common to get the little one.How common is it for people to have portable PLBs rather than one permanently installed on the boat?
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PLBs are cheaper. For the average Joe with a small boat, it's pretty common to get the little one.How common is it for people to have portable PLBs rather than one permanently installed on the boat?
Yeah, we already covered that.I am amazed by some comments here. PLB means Personal Locator Beacon. That is, it is for a person, not a boat. It has never been meant to be used as a beacon for a boat or a plane or whatever. It is for a person who ends up in the water (or on land, lost).
An EPIRB is Emergency Position Indicator Radio Beacon. These are primarily for boats, but also can be used by planes or vehicles. The standard one, which is legislated in some places to be used (eg in NSW more than 2 nm from shore), does not need to activate itself nor does it need to float free of a sinking vessel. My understanding is that most places in the world have similar rules. So, this boat did not need an EPIRB that could activate or come free. A PLB was probably more than was required.
Virtually all of the dive sites, if not all, that I take my boat to do not require an EPIRB. However, I have one, as well as AIS and an PLB. You can never be too safe and the cost is so low for the items concerned to make it crazy to not have them.
My boat has an AIS transceiver, that is, both.Yeah, we already covered that.
Do you have an AIS transmitter or is it just a receiver?
Good. Most people just have a receiver which would do yourself little good in terms of search and rescue.My boat has an AIS transceiver, that is, both.
PLBs are perfectly acceptable for smaller boats in the recreational market and are marketed as such. In the commercial market they could be used for personnel, but most who opt for man overboard technology would use a MOB alert and tracker or a combo of both so the ship can find the crew member rather than wait for SAR assets to be deployed.My boat has an AIS transceiver, that is, both.
So many comments are that PLBs are for smaller boats. No they are not, but I suppose that they are better than nothing.
By the way, I spend a lot of my time volunteering for Marine Rescue NSW saving people who do (sometimes) do stupid things.
This ^^.PLBs are perfectly acceptable for smaller boats in the recreational market and are marketed as such. ...
This ^^.
I am sure lots of people know the difference between a PLB and an EPIRB. But I also assume there are more than zero boat owners who don't.
From my understanding it seems that the owner treated a PLB like it was an EPIRB and hence rendered it mostly useless.