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USCG/NOAA SARSAT CONFERENCE 2010 EPIRB’s How They Work

USCG/NOAA SARSAT CONFERENCE 2010 EPIRB’s How They Work. How the System Works. Types of Beacons. Maritime Distress Beacon. EPIRB s 406 MHz Automatic activation when out of bracket and wet. Floats up right able to transmit Strobe light Min 48 hour transmit Some GPS enabled.

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USCG/NOAA SARSAT CONFERENCE 2010 EPIRB’s How They Work

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  1. USCG/NOAA SARSAT CONFERENCE 2010EPIRB’sHow They Work

  2. How the System Works L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  3. Types of Beacons Maritime Distress Beacon • EPIRBs 406 MHz Automatic activation when out of bracket and wet. Floats up right able to transmit Strobe light Min 48 hour transmit Some GPS enabled L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  4. Types of Beacons Distress Beacon for Personal Use (Land Rescue) • PLBs Manual activation Carried on persons May or may not float Held out of water to transmit NO Strobe light Min 24 hour transmit Some GPS Enabled L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  5. Types of Beacons ELTs Aviation Distress Beacon Operational Applications • Automatic Fixed - AF • Automatic Portable - AP • Survival Equipment – S • Class A (buoyant) • Class B (non-buoyant) • Automatic Deployable - AD • 406 MHz ELTs 406/121.5 MHz 24 hr Transmitter “ON-OFF-ARMED-RESET” controls ELT activated by pilot, crash forces or water activated. L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  6. Types of BeaconsELTs AD S Class B Aviation Distress Beacon AF AP S Class A L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  7. SENDs SATELLITE EMERGENCY NOTIFICATION DEVICES • Operate over any satellite system except Cospas-Sarsat. • Provide individuals in remote areas a means to alert others of an emergency situation and to aid search and rescue personnel to locate those in distress. L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  8. EPIRB • Maritime Satellite • Emergency • Position-Indicating • RadioBeacon L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  9. EPIRB Operational Requirements • EPIRB 406 MHz Signal - 5 Watts • Short bursts at approximately 50 second intervals (varies between 47.5 and 52.5 s), with a transmission time of 440 ms or 520 ms. • Transmits in the 406.0 to 406.1 MHz band. • Transmission consists: • unmodulated carrier, for 160 ms, • short synchronization signal, signal inverted for test, • Digital message that provides stored information (identification, nationality, type of user), • Optionally, current information like, type of emergency and estimated location. L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  10. Hex ID • EPIRB’s identification, when decoded into its 15 character hexadecimal representation, which is the EPIRB’s unique identifier number. • http://www.cospas-sarsat.org/index.php/en/component/beacondecode/?task=showBeacon L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  11. L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  12. 406 Frequency Stability • Frequency stability very important • EPIRB gets on frequency fast and is super stable L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  13. EPIRB Operational Requirements • Strobe Light • Auxiliary Radio-Locating Device121.5 MHz, 25 mW, Warble, (a US Req.) • Self-test Function • Lanyard – 5 to 8 meters • Battery – 48hrs of continuous operation • Buoyancy and Stability – float upright • Designed to prevent inadvertent activation L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  14. Types of Brackets • Category 1 Automatic Release between 4 to 13 ft. EPIRB is transmitting when it gets to the surface Hydrostatic release needs replacement every two years. L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  15. Type of Brackets • Category 2 Manual Release Wet sense deactivation magnet No Bracket carriage requirement L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  16. Types of EPIRBs • Class A & B 121.5MHz and 243 MHz only • Now illegal to use in the USA • 406 MHz and 121.5 EPIRB • Cat 1 and 2 brackets, Class 1 and 2 batteries • 406 MHZ and 121.5 Self locating EPIRB • Cat 1 and 2 brackets, Class 1 and 2 batteries, GPS interface or internal GPS L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  17. Class 1 and 2 Batteries • Operating • Class 1 -40° to + 55° C • Class 2 -20° to + 55° C • Stowage • Class 1 -50° to + 70° C • Class 2 -30° to + 70° C L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  18. Lanyard Lanyard: 5 to 8 meters Orange/yellow color Not rot/deteriorate L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  19. Battery Replacement • Required at Expiration date or if EPIRB activated for any reason besides test. • Expiration of battery = ½ Useful Life. • Useful Life = power for all required testing + 48 hrs operation. L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  20. 406 MHz Detection Rangewith the USCG DF-430 L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  21. EPIRB Operational Requirements • Positive visual and/or audible indication that EPIRB is activated (strobe light flashing). • Easily manually deployed, activate, and deactivated, and transferred to survival craft. • Not be activated or deactivated by conditions encountered in maritime environment. L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  22. EPIRB Control • Ready – EPIRB will be ON in the water unless in its bracket. Sometimes labeled “OFF”. • ON – EPIRB operates regardless of location or orientation. Unconditional “ON” position. (Requires two physical actions) • Test – Self-test Function. L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  23. Beacon Switches L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  24. Beacon Switches L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  25. EPIRB Self Test • Battery Voltage Check • Full Circuitry Check • Test Data burst • GPS acquisition Test (Self Locating) • Not required to check remaining power available in the battery. L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  26. Prevention of Inadvertent Activation • Must be fitted with means to prevent inadvertent activation and deactivation. • Not automatically activate when water washes over while in bracket. • Most EPIRBs use bracket with magnet to disable activation circuit. L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  27. EPIRB Deactivation • Remove beacon from water and dry off or replace in bracket • Move switch to OFF or Ready position • Remove cover and disconnect battery L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  28. EPIRB Activation • How • By definition it transmits: • out of bracket and wet, • by manual switch, in or out of bracket, Or • Self test L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  29. EPIRB Activation • What Happens; • Beacon starts transmitting its Unique Hex ID in a 406 MHz digital message, • 121.5 MHz homer with an audible warble, • Strobe Light starts flashing. L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  30. EPIRB Control Functions L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  31. Brackets • Brackets – Cat 1 L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  32. Brackets Brackets – Cat 1 L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  33. Brackets • Brackets - Cat 1 L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  34. Brackets • Brackets - Cat 2 L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  35. Brackets L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  36. Testing Bracket Magnet A Compass provides simple detection on bracket magnet. L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  37. Bracket Water Testing L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

  38. Questions? Larry.T.Yarbrough@uscg.mil (305) 415 6868 L. Yarbrough/D7CFVS

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