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The rescue gadgets that put you on the map

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Published Date: 06 September 2008
PERSONAL locator beacons are the latest gadgets available for the intrepid and accident-prone to speed help in a potential rescue operation.
They are the size of a TV remote control and cost £200 to £300 – half the price of two years ago. Around 2,000 are registered with RAF Kinloss, the UK's rescue co-ordination centre. Similar equipment is in common use by sailors and private aviators.

The hand-held beacons show location, including latitude and longitude. A button has to be pressed for two seconds to send a distress message, to prevent accidental activation.

The devices send a distress signal via satellite to mission control centres across the world, which alert rescuers.

The centres use global positioning system (GPS) technology to pinpoint the location of the beacon within five seconds of it being activated.

Many beacons also transmit a homing signal which helps to guide search helicopters as they approach the scene.

Those beacons registered with RAF Kinloss also automatically send details of their owners, and contact numbers for relatives, so staff can verify there is an emergency before launching a rescue. A Danish man is thought to be have been the first hillwalker in Britain to be rescued after activating a such a device in the Highlands in May.

Sunderland-based Niels Vinter, 60, raised the alarm after suffering severe abdominal pains while in Glen Etive, 15 miles from Fort William.

Unable to receive a signal on his mobile phone, he used his beacon to send a distress message that was received by a control centre in Houston, Texas. It alerted police in Fort William, who in turn relayed the message to RAF Kinloss.





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  • Last Updated: 05 September 2008 10:17 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

danbob,

06/09/2008 00:31:36
The problem here is that large parts of the highlands have very poor or non existant mobile phone reception. If they did these latest toys wouldn't be needed. So how on earth are relatives going to verify if it's a emergency or not. I can just see now the rescue teams and helicopter crews sitting there dispairing at the thought of these gadgets getting into the hands of some of the clowns that converge on the highlands.
2

donald,

glasgow 06/09/2008 08:21:56
Does Labour's Eletrical Committee hand them out to members only?

 

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