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#1
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The Feb 2010 AOPA Pilot magazine has an article about two pilots rescued
after an airplane crash in Idaho. Each had a SPOT but neither unit was well secured; fortunately, they were mobile enough to dig through the wreckage to find and activate them. A medical helicopter landed on the take off strip about 20 minutes after the accident, then the medical technicians hiked to the crash site. My SPOT is mounted with dual grip fasteners on the canopy rail, but I think I'll make a stronger mount for it. Even if you carry it on your person, it needs to be secured well enough to take the accident forces. Being immobilized in the cockpit with SPOT around your feet won't help any. The article said about 120,000 units have been sold since it went on sale. I thought it would be more, but apparently the company is very happy with the figures. Their new unit is even more attractive at half the size, and with a better button layout. It would fit on a parachute more easily, and it likely will have less dropouts with (I assume) a newer, more sensitive GPS. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (netto to net to email me) - "Transponders in Sailplanes - Jan/2010" also ADS-B, PCAS, Flarm tinyurl.com/yg76qo9 - "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation Mar/2004" Much of what you need to know tinyurl.com/yfs7tnz |
#2
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I've read the article.. very convincing, a strap slot through the back of
the spot case to fit a parachute or seatbelt shoulder strap would be great. (they may have one, been a while since I looked) There were reports of the newer model SPOT having issues.. have those been resolved? BT "Eric Greenwell" wrote in message ... The Feb 2010 AOPA Pilot magazine has an article about two pilots rescued after an airplane crash in Idaho. Each had a SPOT but neither unit was well secured; fortunately, they were mobile enough to dig through the wreckage to find and activate them. A medical helicopter landed on the take off strip about 20 minutes after the accident, then the medical technicians hiked to the crash site. My SPOT is mounted with dual grip fasteners on the canopy rail, but I think I'll make a stronger mount for it. Even if you carry it on your person, it needs to be secured well enough to take the accident forces. Being immobilized in the cockpit with SPOT around your feet won't help any. The article said about 120,000 units have been sold since it went on sale. I thought it would be more, but apparently the company is very happy with the figures. Their new unit is even more attractive at half the size, and with a better button layout. It would fit on a parachute more easily, and it likely will have less dropouts with (I assume) a newer, more sensitive GPS. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (netto to net to email me) - "Transponders in Sailplanes - Jan/2010" also ADS-B, PCAS, Flarm tinyurl.com/yg76qo9 - "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation Mar/2004" Much of what you need to know tinyurl.com/yfs7tnz |
#3
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I want a SPOT or APRS with me, not in the glider. My parachute
rigger added a webbing strap to the left shoulder flap of the container. This puts the SPOT (which is in the pouch from an old Personal ELT) in a perfect position and does not interfere with deployment of the parachute. The flap has Velcro on one side and opens to allow the risers out. The right side is near the gooseneck microphone, perhaps not as good. Jim |
#4
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On Feb 15, 11:11*am, JS wrote:
* I want a SPOT or APRS with me, not in the glider. My parachute rigger added a webbing strap to the left shoulder flap of the container. This puts the SPOT (which is in the pouch from an old Personal ELT) in a perfect position and does not interfere with deployment of the parachute. The flap has Velcro on one side and opens to allow the risers out. The right side is near the gooseneck microphone, perhaps not as good. Jim Actually I want the SPOT mounted in the glider where it has a great sky view and be in tracking mode. I love SPOT tracking. And I want a 406MHz PLB and the resources of the USAF coordination center and all the other SAR organizations behind it when the crapola really hits the fan. I've flown with that exact configuration from when SPOT messengers were first available. It is great to see increased awareness of devices like the SPOT messenger. Unfortunately the AOPA articel does a pretty poor job of explaining this technology, especially vs. PLB and ELT devices. 1. It confuses 406 MHz PLB and SPOT messengers, calling the SPOT a PLB. 2. It does not discuss (or even better emphasize) the benfits of SPOT tracking - which to me is the "killer app" of this device. 3. The article did nothing to explain the termination of 121.5MHz SARSAT monitoring etc, and 406 Mz vs. 121.5 Mhz ELTS etc. In fact the article has people describing problems locating ELTs -- what I suspect are old 121.5 MHz only ELTs without making clear that that modern 406 Mhz ELTS and PLBs (with or without GPS output) are far superior. The article also mentioned termination of 121.5 MHz SARSAT monitoring without explaining that 406 MHz ELTs are monitored via SARSAT and vastly superior to the old 121.5 MHz only ELTs. I understand the desire to base around a human interest story but they could have done a lot better explaining the technology and mentioning other options. Fellow AOPA members can read the article online here - http://www.aopa.org/members/files/pi...ture_spot.html BTW on Jim's comment about how he *properly* mounting his SPOT on his parachute harness strap. Allen Silver who rigs many glider parachutes has been quite concerned about SPOT messengers mounted incorrectly on the parachute shoulder strap in such as way that they could prevent the risers deplying properly. He has seen some very unsafe things done. See this PDF on Allen's Web site. http://www.silverparachutes.com/file...ce_2009-07.pdf Darryl |
#5
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Hi,
Spot has been very proactive about fixing the issues with the SPOT-2 units. They will pay for return shipping for any units purchased before the recall. The new version of the SPOT-2 units should be available very soon. Best Regards, Paul Remde Cumulus Soaring, Inc. "BT" wrote in message ... I've read the article.. very convincing, a strap slot through the back of the spot case to fit a parachute or seatbelt shoulder strap would be great. (they may have one, been a while since I looked) There were reports of the newer model SPOT having issues.. have those been resolved? BT "Eric Greenwell" wrote in message ... The Feb 2010 AOPA Pilot magazine has an article about two pilots rescued after an airplane crash in Idaho. Each had a SPOT but neither unit was well secured; fortunately, they were mobile enough to dig through the wreckage to find and activate them. A medical helicopter landed on the take off strip about 20 minutes after the accident, then the medical technicians hiked to the crash site. My SPOT is mounted with dual grip fasteners on the canopy rail, but I think I'll make a stronger mount for it. Even if you carry it on your person, it needs to be secured well enough to take the accident forces. Being immobilized in the cockpit with SPOT around your feet won't help any. The article said about 120,000 units have been sold since it went on sale. I thought it would be more, but apparently the company is very happy with the figures. Their new unit is even more attractive at half the size, and with a better button layout. It would fit on a parachute more easily, and it likely will have less dropouts with (I assume) a newer, more sensitive GPS. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (netto to net to email me) - "Transponders in Sailplanes - Jan/2010" also ADS-B, PCAS, Flarm tinyurl.com/yg76qo9 - "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation Mar/2004" Much of what you need to know tinyurl.com/yfs7tnz |
#6
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Thanx Paul..
I'm heading out on a long cross country trip in May.. ASEL Coast to Coast and return. BT "Paul Remde" wrote in message ... Hi, Spot has been very proactive about fixing the issues with the SPOT-2 units. They will pay for return shipping for any units purchased before the recall. The new version of the SPOT-2 units should be available very soon. Best Regards, Paul Remde Cumulus Soaring, Inc. "BT" wrote in message ... I've read the article.. very convincing, a strap slot through the back of the spot case to fit a parachute or seatbelt shoulder strap would be great. (they may have one, been a while since I looked) There were reports of the newer model SPOT having issues.. have those been resolved? BT "Eric Greenwell" wrote in message ... The Feb 2010 AOPA Pilot magazine has an article about two pilots rescued after an airplane crash in Idaho. Each had a SPOT but neither unit was well secured; fortunately, they were mobile enough to dig through the wreckage to find and activate them. A medical helicopter landed on the take off strip about 20 minutes after the accident, then the medical technicians hiked to the crash site. My SPOT is mounted with dual grip fasteners on the canopy rail, but I think I'll make a stronger mount for it. Even if you carry it on your person, it needs to be secured well enough to take the accident forces. Being immobilized in the cockpit with SPOT around your feet won't help any. The article said about 120,000 units have been sold since it went on sale. I thought it would be more, but apparently the company is very happy with the figures. Their new unit is even more attractive at half the size, and with a better button layout. It would fit on a parachute more easily, and it likely will have less dropouts with (I assume) a newer, more sensitive GPS. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (netto to net to email me) - "Transponders in Sailplanes - Jan/2010" also ADS-B, PCAS, Flarm tinyurl.com/yg76qo9 - "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation Mar/2004" Much of what you need to know tinyurl.com/yfs7tnz |
#7
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I am removing the members only tag so all can read the article.
All AOPA Pilot articles are available to the public three months after publishing date of Pilot Magazine. On Feb 15, 5:10*pm, "BT" wrote: Thanx Paul.. I'm heading out on a long cross country trip in May.. ASEL Coast to Coast and return. BT "Paul Remde" wrote in message ... Hi, Spot has been very proactive about fixing the issues with the SPOT-2 units. They will pay for return shipping for any units purchased before the recall. The new version of the SPOT-2 units should be available very soon. Best Regards, Paul Remde Cumulus Soaring, Inc. "BT" wrote in message ... I've read the article.. very convincing, a strap slot through the back of the spot case to fit a parachute or seatbelt shoulder strap would be great. (they may have one, been a while since I looked) There were reports of the newer model SPOT having issues.. have those been resolved? BT "Eric Greenwell" wrote in message ... The Feb 2010 AOPA Pilot magazine has an article about two pilots rescued after an airplane crash in Idaho. Each had a SPOT but neither unit was well secured; fortunately, they were mobile enough to dig through the wreckage to find and activate them. A medical helicopter landed on the take off strip about 20 minutes after the accident, then the medical technicians hiked to the crash site. My SPOT is mounted with dual grip fasteners on the canopy rail, but I think I'll make a stronger mount for it. Even if you carry it on your person, it needs to be secured well enough to take the accident forces. Being immobilized in the cockpit with SPOT around your feet won't help any. The article said about 120,000 units have been sold since it went on sale. I thought it would be more, but apparently the company is very happy with the figures. Their new unit is even more attractive at half the size, and with a better button layout. It would fit on a parachute more easily, and it likely will have less dropouts with (I assume) a newer, more sensitive GPS. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (netto to net to email me) - "Transponders in Sailplanes - Jan/2010" also ADS-B, PCAS, Flarm tinyurl.com/yg76qo9 - "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation Mar/2004" Much of what you need to know tinyurl.com/yfs7tnz- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
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