Absolutely! If I could find a third party verifiable source I'd rather use it, but can't find any. As far as I can see I don't even find claims by the PLB manufacturers--let one third party sources. The toy seems to have more documentation than the tool.
So, I'm still wondering how you come to your 100% claim?
EPIRBS use US military satellites for data, Spot uses old consumer satellites. Epirbs also dual transmit on 121.5mhz, the old emergency frequency. Their main is 406 Mhz.
SPot runs on a much less reliable frequency That's why Spot runs for 20 minuets.
I totally agree! That's why the flashing light is a welcome additional feature and I change as soon as I see it with the spare set my pocket or tank bag along the trail. Can you change batteries in an EPIRB..or how do you know if the batteries are low?
Not field serviceable, send to authorized shop (me in my case) for change in 5 years. Same batteries and system used in all US based aircraft today.
That sounds like a pretty effective toy. All 6 or so SPOT users rescued each Summer? Any missed? And how many EPIRB rescues picked up and how many missed?
They are...
Yes 6 or so are Spot rescues, we get very few Epirb calls. We equate that to the people using them are more likely to be prepared and experienced.
We've had one Epirb we couldn't locate and that was because it turned out to be a stolen unit and the guy that had it was traveling with it pushing buttons randomly. The military eventually found him if I recall.
P.S. I'm in the Emergency Management field too...local bi-county policy board. We had a report by staff on some recent SPOT and PLB data. The former was the most popular mode..our peers over on the coast flipped the equation with EPIRBS and boats.