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#1
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While I don't know much about this product, especially cost, it might be
worth looking onto for someone familiar with the technology. Maybe it could be taylored for our specific needs. http://www.daysatphones.com/downloads/simplex.pdf Bill Daniels |
#2
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![]() What you are looking at is SPOT for grown ups. SPOT is a subsidiary of Globalstar and like all the Globalstar simplex hardware, the devices are made by Axonn (http://www.axonn.com) so you can look there for more information. This other Axonn hardware is too large and unwieldy for practical use and would require a lot of systems integration work. Somebody could take thee Axonn modules (the picture on their web site of the STX2 sat transmitter looks like what is inside SPOT) and build hardware small enough for our uses for even more work. Service costs would be significantly higher, they are already higher than SPOT with only a few messages per day, let alone every 10 minutes. Ultimately doing anything custom is likely the wrong path and it is much better to ride the consumer economics curve (even a device built for GA markets is going to be a lot more expensive). SPOT as is seems very worthwhile, I've got mine and it works as they claim. I'd still like to see lots of web site improvements and opening up of their back-end software but as is it looks like it will save lots of retrieve hassles, and more importantly has potential to save lives. Darryl On Jan 1, 12:49 pm, "Bill Daniels" bildan@comcast-dot-net wrote: While I don't know much about this product, especially cost, it might be worth looking onto for someone familiar with the technology. Maybe it could be taylored for our specific needs. http://www.daysatphones.com/downloads/simplex.pdf Bill Daniels |
#3
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On Jan 2, 12:36*am, "
wrote: and more importantly has potential to save lives. It's not a PLB, nor can it even mimic the functions of one. It's not a piece of survival equipment. Dan |
#4
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On Jan 2, 4:42 pm, Dan G wrote:
On Jan 2, 12:36 am, " wrote: and more importantly has potential to save lives. It's not a PLB, nor can it even mimic the functions of one. It's not a piece of survival equipment. Dan It is not a PLB by definition, but it surely looks like a piece of survival equipment to me. A PLB meets specific legal requirements/ approvals, etc. including a good old fashioned 121.5 homing beacon. But at some level you are playing semantics, instead how about describing what the issues are you see with SPOT? Do I personally want a PLB hanging off my parachute harness when in deep crapola, yes, more so than a SPOT. But especially when flying in remote desolate areas I want (and have) both a PLB and SPOT for tracking and non-life and death escalations (land outs, etc.). Expect to see lots of marketing of survival stories of people saved by having a SPOT, you can just tell where they are going with this. After all, it is capable of sending an accurate lat/long position, with escalating levels of severity and more importantly unlike ELT and PLBs it is capable of sending pseudo real time position reports so it is possible to get last know position information without relying on either a PLB or ELT manual activation or unreliable ELT impact activation. As for mimicking the function of a PLB, I'd say they aim to mimic the rapid notification and lat/long fix that SARSAT provide, and on paper they should be able to do that part pretty well. Now how well they work in practice, including escalation into the appropriate authorities, we'll have to see. Probably like you, I dislike any marketing that blurs the differentiation between the SPOT and an PLB -- and I wish they would emphasize the tracking feature more (which allows this to be positioned as a value add over *also* having a PLB). Darryl |
#5
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On Jan 2, 4:42*pm, Dan G wrote:
On Jan 2, 12:36*am, " wrote: and more importantly has potential to save lives. It's not a PLB, nor can it even mimic the functions of one. It's not a piece of survival equipment. Dan For PLB to work, it requires both the pilot and PLB to survive the crash. Spot will provide a proximate location of the crash even if none survived. Ramy |
#6
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On Jan 2, 8:37*pm, Ramy wrote:
For PLB to work, it requires both the pilot and PLB to survive the crash. Spot will provide a proximate location of the crash even if none survived. Ramy Great point. The other thing is it sends the LAT/LONG reports back to your crew or contest officials (whomever you designate), so they can go right to work on locating the pilot rather than waiting for SAR to swing into action. Ideally you'd want a device where you could plug it into an aircraft- mounted accelerometer to send out an automatic 911 in a crash. That would be an easy mod. Better to have the accelerometer mounted in the aircraft so the thing doesn't go off when you drop it, etc. 9B |
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