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Emergency position-indicating radiobeacon

An emergency position-indicating radiobeacon (EPIRB) is a type of emergency locator beacon for commercial and recreational boats, a portable, battery-powered radio transmitter used in emergencies to locate boaters in distress and in need of immediate rescue. In the event of an emergency, such as a ship sinking or medical emergency onboard, the transmitter is activated and begins transmitting a continuous 406 MHz distress radio signal, which is used by search-and-rescue teams to quickly locate the emergency and render aid. The signal is detected by satellites operated by an international consortium of rescue services, COSPAS-SARSAT, which can detect emergency beacons anywhere on Earth transmitting on the distress frequency of 406 MHz. The satellites calculate the position or utilize the GPS coordinates of the beacon and quickly passes the information to the appropriate local first responder organization, which performs the search and rescue. As Search and Rescue approach the search areas, they use Direction Finding (DF) equipment to locate the beacon using the 121.5 MHz homing signal, or in newer EPIRBs, the AIS location signal. The basic purpose of this system is to help rescuers find survivors within the so-called "golden day"[1] (the first 24 hours following a traumatic event) during which the majority of survivors can usually be saved. The feature distinguishing a modern EPIRB, often called GPIRB, from other types of emergency beacon is that it contains a GPS receiver and broadcasts its position, usually accurate within 100 m (330 ft), to facilitate location. Previous emergency beacons without a GPS can only be localized to within 2 km (1.2 mi) by the COSPAS satellites and relied heavily upon the 121.5 MHz homing signal to pin-point the beacons location as they arrived on scene.

Overview diagram of COSPAS-SARSAT communication system used to detect and locate ELTs, EPIRBs, and PLBs.
First generation EPIRB emergency locator beacons

The standard frequency of a modern EPIRB is 406 MHz. It is an internationally regulated mobile radiocommunication service that aids search-and-rescue operations to detect and locate distressed watercraft, aircraft, and people.[2] It is distinct from a satellite emergency position-indicating radiobeacon station.

The first form of these beacons was the 121.5 MHz ELT, which was designed as an automatic locator beacon for crashed military aircraft. These beacons were first used in the 1950s by the U.S. military, and were mandated for use on many types of commercial and general-aviation aircraft beginning in the early 1970s.[3] The frequency and signal format used by the ELT beacons was not designed for satellite detection, which resulted in a system with poor location detection abilities and long delays in detection of activated beacons. The satellite detection network was built after the ELT beacons were already in general use, with the first satellite not being launched until 1982, and even then, the satellites only provided detection, with location accuracy being roughly 20 km (12 mi).[3] The technology was later expanded to cover use on vessels at sea (EPIRB), individual persons (PLB), and starting in 2016, maritime survivor locating devices (MSLD).[citation needed] All have migrated from using 121.500 MHz as their primary frequency to using 406 MHz, which was designed for satellite detection and location.[citation needed]

Since the inception of Cospas-Sarsat in 1982, distress radio beacons have assisted in the rescue of over 50,000 people in more than 7,000 distress situations.[4] In 2010 alone, the system provided information used to rescue 2,388 persons in 641 distress situations.[5]

Types of emergency locator beacons

The several types of emergency locator beacons are distinguished by the environment for which they were designed to be used:

  • ELT (emergency locator transmitters) are carried on aircraft and are activated in the event of a crash.
    • Activated by G-switch (crash sensor) or manually by cockpit remote switch or ON switch on ELT.
  • EPIRB (emergency position-indicating radio beacons) are carried on ships and boats, and signal maritime distress.
    • Activated by water when the beacon is out of the bracket or manually by the ON switch on the EPIRB
  • SEPIRB (submarine emergency position-indicating radio beacons) are EPIRBs designed only for use on submarines.
  • SSAS (ship security alert systems) are used to indicate possible piracy or terrorism attacks discreetly on sea-going vessels.
    • Activated by discreet switch/button in the ship's bridge or cabin, or manually on the SSAS.
  • PLB (personal locator beacons) are carried by individuals and intended to indicate a person in distress who is away from normal emergency services; e.g., 9-1-1. They are also used for crew-saving applications in shipping and lifeboats at terrestrial systems. In New South Wales, some police stations and the NSW National Parks & Wildlife Service provide personal locator beacons to hikers for no charge.[6]
    • Activated manually by deploying antenna and pressing the ON button/switch.

Distress alerts transmitted from ELTs, EPIRBs, SSAS, and PLBs are received and processed by the International Cospas-Sarsat Programme, the international satellite system for search and rescue (SAR). These beacons transmit a 406 MHz distress signal every 50 seconds, varying over a span of 2.5 seconds to avoid multiple beacons always transmitting at the same time.

When manually activated, or automatically activated upon immersion or impact, such beacons send out a distress signal. The signals are monitored worldwide and the location of the distress is detected by non-geostationary satellites using the Doppler effect for trilateration, and in more recent EPIRBs, also by GPS.[7]

Loosely related devices, including search and rescue transponders (SART), AIS-SART, avalanche transceivers, and RECCO do not operate on 406 MHz, thus are covered in separate articles.

International COSPAS-SARSAT Programme

Cospas-Sarsat is an international organization that has been a model of international cooperation, even during the Cold War. SARSAT means search-and-rescue satellite-aided tracking. COSPAS (КОСПАС) is an acronym for the Russian words "COsmicheskaya Sistema Poiska Avariynyh Sudov" (Космическая Система Поиска Аварийных Судов), which translates to "space system for the search of vessels in distress". A consortium of USSR, the U.S., Canada, and France formed the organization in 1982. Since then, 29 other countries have joined.

The satellites used in the system include:

  • LEOSAR or Low Earth Orbiting Search and Rescue Satellites
    • The LEOSAR system calculates the location of distress events using Doppler processing techniques. Doppler processing is based upon the principle that the frequency of the distress beacon, as "heard" by the satellite instrument, is affected by the relative velocity of the satellite with respect to the beacon. By monitoring the change of the beacon frequency of the received beacon signal and knowing the exact position of the satellite, the LUT is able to calculate the location of the beacon.
  • GEOSAR or Geosynchronous Earth Orbiting Search and Rescue Satellites
    • As a GEOSAR satellite remains fixed relative to the Earth rotating with the earth around the equator, GEOSAR satellites utilize the GPS provided by the EPIRB, PLB, or ELT to provide rescuers with beacon position information.
  • MEOSAR or Mid-Earth Orbiting Search and Rescue Satellites
    • The newest of the Cospas Sarsat satellites, detect EPIRB, PLB, and ELT distress signals in almost real-time (i.e within 5 minutes) including the beacons location with or without GPS.
    • The new MEOSAR system also provides the framework along with the Galileo Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) for EPIRBs, PLBs, and EPIRBs to utilize the new Return Link Service or RLS that provides a confirmation message from Search and Rescue back to the beacon to let the survivors know their distress message was confirmed.

Cospas-Sarsat defines standards for beacons, auxiliary equipment to be mounted on conforming weather and communication satellites, ground stations, and communications methods. The satellites communicate the beacon data to their ground stations, which forward it to main control centers of each nation that can initiate a rescue effort.


Cospas Sarsat Monitoring include:

  • Local User Terminals (LUTs)
  • Mission Control Centers (MCC)
  • Rescue Coordination Center (RCC)

Detection and location

 
VHF radio direction finding

A transmission is typically detected and processed in this manner:

  1. The transmitter is activated, either automatically in a crash or after sinking, or manually by survivors of an emergency situation.
  2. At least one satellite picks up the beacon's transmission.
  3. The satellites transfer the beacon's signal to their respective ground control stations.
  4. The ground stations process the signals and forward the data, including approximate location, to a national authority.
  5. The national authority forwards the data to a rescue authority
  6. The rescue authority uses its own receiving equipment afterwards to locate the beacon and commence its own rescue or recovery operations.

Once the satellite data is received, less than a minute is needed to forward them to any signatory nation. The primary means of detection and location is by the COSPAS-SARSAT satellites. However, additional means of location are frequently used. For example, the FAA requires that all pilots monitor 121.500 MHz whenever possible, and the USCG has a network of direction finder sites along the coastlines.[8] The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration maintains a near-real-time map that shows SARSAT U.S. Rescues.[9]

Several systems are in use, with beacons of varying expense, different types of satellites, and varying performance. Carrying even the oldest systems provides an immense improvement in safety over carrying none.

The types of satellites in the network are:

  • LEOSAR
    • Support Doppler detection and reception of encoded position
    • Receivers are payloads on various Low Earth Orbit satellites
  • MEOSAR
    • Medium Earth Orbiting Search and Rescue
    • Receivers are payloads on the U.S. GPS satellites, on the Russian GLONASS satellites, and on the European GALILEO satellites.
  • GEOSAR
    • Supports only reception of encoded position
    • Receivers are payloads on various geosynchronous satellites, including some of the U.S. GOES weather satellites (including GOES-16).

When one of the COSPAS-SARSAT satellites detects a beacon, the detection is passed to one of the program's roughly 30 Mission Control Centers, such as USMCC (in Suitland, Maryland), where the detected location and beacon details are used to determine to which rescue coordination centre (for example, the U.S. Coast Guard's PACAREA RCC, in Alameda, California) to pass the alert.[10]

Beacon operation

GPS-based, registered

The 406-MHz beacons with GPS track with a precision of 100 m in the 70% of the world closest to the equator, and send a serial number so the responsible authority can look up phone numbers to notify the registrant (e.g., next-of-kin) in four minutes.

The GPS system permits stationary, wide-view geosynchronous communications satellites to enhance the Doppler position received by low Earth orbit satellites. EPIRB beacons with built-in GPS are usually called GPIRBs, for GPS position-indicating radio beacon or global position-indicating radio beacon.

However, rescue cannot begin until a Doppler track is available. The COSPAS-SARSAT specifications say[11] that a beacon location is not considered "resolved" unless at least two Doppler tracks match or a Doppler track confirms an encoded (GPS) track. One or more GPS tracks are not sufficient.

High-precision registered

An intermediate technology 406-MHz beacon (now mostly obsolete in favor of GPS-enabled units) has worldwide coverage, locates within 2 km (12.5 km2 search area), notifies kin and rescuers in 2 hours maximum (46 min average), and has a serial number to look up phone numbers, etc. This can take up to two hours because it has to use moving weather satellites to locate the beacon. To help locate the beacon, the beacon's frequency is controlled to 2 parts per billion, and its power is five watts.

Both of the above types of beacons usually include an auxiliary 25-milliwatt beacon at 121.5 MHz to guide rescue aircraft.

Traditional ELT, unregistered

The oldest, cheapest beacons are aircraft ELTs that send an anonymous warble on the aviation band distress frequency at 121.5 MHz. The frequency is often routinely monitored by commercial aircraft, but has not been monitored by satellite since Feb. 1, 2009.[12]

These distress signals could be detected by satellite over only 60% of the earth, required up to 6 hours for notification, located within 20 km (12 mi) (search area of 1200 km2), were anonymous, and could not be located well because their frequency is only accurate to 50 parts per million and the signals were broadcast using only 75–100 milliwatts of power. Coverage was partial because the satellite had to be in view of both the beacon and a ground station at the same time; the satellites did not store and forward the beacon's position. Coverage in polar and Southern Hemisphere areas was poor.

False alarms were common, as the beacon transmitted on the aviation emergency frequency, with interference from other electronic and electrical systems. To reduce false alarms, a beacon was confirmed by a second satellite pass, which could easily slow confirmation of a 'case' of distress to as much as 4 hours (although in rare circumstances, the satellites could be positioned such that immediate detection becomes possible.)

Location by Doppler (without GPS)

The Cospas-Sarsat system was made possible by Doppler processing. Local-user terminals (LUTs) detecting nongeostationary satellites interpret the Doppler frequency shift heard by LEOSAR and MEOSAR satellites as they pass over a beacon transmitting at a fixed frequency. The interpretation determines both bearing and range. The range and bearing are measured from the rate of change of the heard frequency, which varies both according to the path of the satellite in space and the rotation of the earth. This triangulates the position of the beacon. A faster change in the Doppler indicates that the beacon is closer to the satellite's orbit. If the beacon is moving toward or away from the satellite track due to the Earth's rotation, it is on one side or other of the satellite's path. Doppler shift is zero at the closest point of approach between the beacon and the orbit.

If the beacon's frequency is more precise, it can be located more precisely, saving search time, so modern 406-MHz beacons are accurate to 2 parts per billion, giving a search area of only 2 km2, compared to the older beacons accurate to 50 parts per million that had 200 km2 of search area.

To increase the useful power, and handle multiple simultaneous beacons, modern 406-MHz beacons transmit in bursts, and remain silent for about 50 seconds.

Russia developed the original system, and its success drove the desire to develop the improved 406-MHz system. The original system was a brilliant adaptation to the low-quality beacons, originally designed to aid air searches. It used just a simple, lightweight transponder on the satellite, with no digital recorders or other complexities. Ground stations listened to each satellite as long as it was above the horizon. Doppler shift was used to locate the beacon(s). Multiple beacons were separated when a computer program analysed the signals with a fast fourier transform. Also, two satellite passes per beacon were used. This eliminated false alarms by using two measurements to verify the beacon's location from two different bearings. This prevented false alarms from VHF channels that affected a single satellite. Regrettably, the second satellite pass almost doubled the average time before notification of the rescuing authority. However, the notification time was much less than a day.

Satellites

Receivers are auxiliary systems mounted on several types of satellites. This substantially reduces the program's cost. The weather satellites that carry the SARSAT receivers are in "ball of yarn" orbits, inclined at 99 degrees. The longest period that all satellites can be out of line-of-sight of a beacon is about two hours. The first satellite constellation was launched in the early 1970s by the Soviet Union, Canada, France and the United States.

Some geosynchronous satellites have beacon receivers. Since the end of 2003, there are four such geostationary satellites (GEOSAR) that cover more than 80% of the surface of the earth. As with all geosynchronous satellites, they are located above the equator. The GEOSAR satellites do not cover the polar caps. Since they see the Earth as a whole, they see the beacon immediately, but have no motion, and thus no Doppler frequency shift to locate it. However, if the beacon transmits GPS data, the geosynchronous satellites give nearly instantaneous response.

Search-and-rescue response

Emergency beacons operating on 406 MHz transmit a unique 15-, 22-, or 30-character serial number called a hex code. When the beacon is purchased, the hex code should be registered with the relevant national (or international) authority. After one of the mission control centers has detected the signal, this registration information is passed to the rescue coordination center, which then provides the appropriate search-and-rescue agency with crucial information, such as:

  • phone numbers to call
  • a description of the vessel, aircraft, vehicle, or person (in the case of a PLB)
  • the home port of a vessel or aircraft
  • any additional information that may be useful to SAR agencies

Registration information allows SAR agencies to start a rescue more quickly. For example, if a shipboard telephone number listed in the registration is unreachable, it could be assumed that a real distress event is occurring. Conversely, the information provides a quick and easy way for the SAR agencies to check and eliminate false alarms (potentially sparing the beacon's owner from significant false alert fines).

An unregistered 406-MHz beacon still carries some information, such as the manufacturer and serial number of the beacon, and in some cases, an MMSI or aircraft tail number/ICAO 24-bit address. Despite the clear benefits of registration, an unregistered 406-MHz beacon is very substantially better than a 121.5-MHz beacon, because the hex code received from a 406-MHz beacon confirms the authenticity of the signal as a real distress signal.

Beacons operating on 121.5 MHz and 243.0 MHz only simply transmit an anonymous siren tone, thus carry no position or identity information to SAR agencies. Such beacons now rely solely on the terrestrial or aeronautical monitoring of the frequency.

Responsible agencies

RCCs are responsible for a geographic area, known as a "search-and-rescue region of responsibility" (SRR). SRRs are designated by the International Maritime Organization and the International Civil Aviation Organization. RCCs are operated unilaterally by personnel of a single military service (e.g. an air force, or a navy) or a single civilian service (e.g. a national police force, or a coast guard).

Americas

These international search-and-rescue points of contact[13] receive SAR alerts from the USMCC.[14]

SPOC SRR Name Geographic Coverage SAR Agency
Argentina - Servicio de Alerta de Socorro Satelital (SASS) ARMCC
Bermuda Maritime Operations Centre BERMUDASP
Central American Corporation for Navigation Area Services COCESNA
Colombia COLMSP
Dominican Republic DOMREPSP
Ecuador ECSP
Guyana GUYSP
Mexico MEXISP
Mexico Telecommunications MEXTEL
Netherlands Antilles NANTSP
Panama PANSP
Trinidad and Tobago TTSP
Venezuela VZMCC
Bolivia BOLSP
Chile RCC ChileRCC
Paraguay PARSP
Uruguay URSP
United States

The U.S. NOAA operates the U.S. Mission Control Center (USMCC) in Suitland, Maryland. It distributes beacon signal reports to one or more of these RCCs:[14]

United States SPOCs
RCC SRR name Geographic coverage SAR agency Phone number
Air Force Rescue Coordination Center AFRCC Land-based emergency signals in the lower 48 states United States Air Force Auxiliary Civil Air Patrol
Alaska Air National Guard operates the Alaska Rescue Coordination Center AKRCC Alaskan inland areas On-shore beacons are investigated by local search-and-rescue services in Alaska.
U.S. Coast Guard[15] The Coast Guard investigates offshore beacons and rescues victims.
Coast Guard Atlantic Area LANTAREA 757-398-6700
District 1: Boston, MA

(RCC Boston)

CGD01 (617)223-8555
District 5: Portsmouth, VA

(RCC Norfolk)

CGD05 (757)398-6231
District 7: Miami, FL

(RCC Miami)

CGD07 (305)415-6800
District 8: New Orleans, LA

(RCC New Orleans)

CGD08 (504)589-6225
District 9: Cleveland, OH

(RCC Cleveland)

CGD09 (216)902-6117
District 11: Alameda, CA

(RCC Alameda and

Pacific SAR Coordinator)

PACAREA (510)437-3701
District 13: Seattle, WA

(RCC Seattle)

CGD13 (206)220-7001
District 14: Honolulu, HI

(RCC Honolulu; operated as JRCC with DOD)

CGD14 (808)535-3333
District 17: Juneau, AK

(RCC Juneau)

CGD17 (907)463-2000
U.S. Coast Guard Sector San Juan (RSC)

(sub-sector of RCC Miami)

SANJN (787)289-2042
U.S. Coast Guard Sector Guam (RSC) (coordinates SAR under RCC Honolulu) MARSEC (671)355-4824

The US Coast Guard web page for EPIRBs states: "You may be fined for false activation of an unregistered EPIRB. The US Coast Guard routinely refers cases involving the nondistress activation of an EPIRB (e.g., as a hoax, through gross negligence, carelessness, or improper storage and handling) to the Federal Communications Commission. The FCC will prosecute cases based upon evidence provided by the Coast Guard, and will issue warning letters or notices of apparent liability for fines up to $10,000."[16]

Canada

The Canadian Mission Control Centre receives and distributes distress alerts.

In Canada, the Canadian Coast Guard and Canadian Forces Search and Rescue (Royal Canadian Air Force and Royal Canadian Navy) are partners in Joint Rescue Co-ordination Centres; CCG operates Maritime Rescue Subcentres to offload work from JRCC.

RCC SRR Name Geographic Coverage SAR Agency
Joint Rescue Coordination Centre Halifax HALIFAX Halifax Search and Rescue Region
Maritime Rescue Sub-Centre Quebec QuebecCity
Joint Rescue Coordination Centre Trenton TRENTON Trenton Search and Rescue Region.

AIRCOM also operates the Canadian Mission Control Centre (CMCC) from JRCC Trenton

Joint Rescue Coordination Centre Victoria VICTORIA Victoria Search and Rescue Region
Maritime Rescue Sub-Centre St. John's waters surrounding the province of Newfoundland and Labrador

Europe

United Kingdom

The United Kingdom, the Department for Transport, Maritime and Coastguard Agency operates the Mission Control Centre (UKMCC), which receives and distributes distress alerts.

In the UK, the Distress and Diversion Cell of the Royal Air Force provides continuous monitoring of 121.5 MHz and 243.0 MHz, with autotriangulation from a network of terrestrial receivers on both frequencies.

Russia

In Russia, operations are supported by the Federal State Unitary Enterprise Morsvyazsputnik. [17]

Asia

In Hong Kong, operations are supported by the Hong Kong Marine Department's[17] Hong Kong Maritime Rescue Co-ordination Centre (MRCC)

In India, operations are supported by the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO)[17] and by the Indian Coast Guard's Maritime Rescue Coordination Centre Mumbai (MRCC)

In China, operations are supported by the Maritime Safety Administration, Bureau of Harbour Superintendency.[17]

In Japan, operations are supported by the Japan Coast Guard[17]

In Vietnam, operations are supported by the Ministry of Transport, Vietnam Maritime Administration (VINAMARINE).[17]

In Singapore, operations are supported by the Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore.[17]

In the Republic of Korea, operations are supported by the Korea Coast Guard.[17]

In Indonesia, operations are supported by the National SAR Agency of Indonesia (BASARNAS).[17]

In Taiwan, operations are supported by the International Telecommunication Development Company (ITDC)[17]

Phase-out of 121.5 MHz satellite alerting service

Because of the extremely high numbers of false alerts on the 121.500 MHz frequency (over 98% of all COSPAS-SARSAT alerts), the IMO eventually requested for a termination of COSPAS-SARSAT processing of 121.5 MHz signals. The ICAO Council also agreed to this phase-out request, and the COSPAS-SARSAT Council decided that future satellites would no longer carry the 121.5 MHz search and rescue repeater (SARR).[18] Since 1 February 2009, only 406 MHz beacons are detected by the international Cospas-Sarsat SAR satellite system. This affects all maritime beacons (EPIRBs), all aviation beacons (ELTs) and all personal beacons (PLBs). In other words, Cospas-Sarsat has ceased satellite detection and processing of 121.5/243 MHz beacons. These older beacons are now only detectable by ground-based receivers and aircraft.

EPIRBs that do not transmit on 406 MHz are banned on boats in the United States[19] and in many other jurisdictions. More information about the switch to 406 MHz is available on page.

Despite the switch to 406 MHz, pilots and ground stations are encouraged to continue to monitor for transmissions on the emergency frequencies, as most 406 MHz beacons are required to be equipped with 121.5 "homers." Furthermore, the 121.5 MHz frequency continues remains the official global VHF aircraft voice distress frequency.

FAA transition status

In a Safety Recommendation released September 2007, the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board once again recommended that the U.S. FAA require all aircraft have 406 MHz ELTs.[20] They first recommended this back in 2000 and after vigorous opposition by AOPA, the FAA declined to do so. Citing two recent accidents, one with a 121.5 MHz ELT and one with a 406 MHz ELT, the NTSB concludes that switching all ELTs to 406 MHz is a necessary goal to work towards.[21][better source needed]

NASA has conducted crash tests with small airplanes to investigate how ELTs perform.[22][23][24]

Emergency Locator Transmitters

 
ELT about to be installed onto an airplane
The radiotelephony locator beacon sound made by ELTs and some EPIRBs.

Emergency Locator Transmitters (ELTs) are fairly expensive (aviation use; Average cost is $1500–3000[25]) locator beacons. In commercial aircraft, a cockpit voice recorder or flight data recorder must contain an underwater locator beacon. In the US, ELTs are required to be permanently installed in most general aviation aircraft, depending upon the type or location of operation.

The specifications for the design of ELTs are published by the RTCA, and in the specification the alarm signal is defined as an AM signal (A3X and/or N0N emissions), containing a swept tone ranging from 1600 Hz to 300 Hz (downwards), with 2-4 sweeps per second.[26][27] When activated, 406 MHz units transmit a 0.5 second, 5-watt digital burst every 50 seconds, varying within a span of ±2.5 seconds somewhat randomly, so as to avoid multiple ELTs always having their beacons synchronized.[28]

As per 14 CFR 91.207.a.1, ELTs built according to TSO-C91 2008-07-04 at the Wayback Machine (of the type described below as "Traditional ELT, unregistered") have not been permitted for new installations since June 21, 1995; the replacing standard was TSO-C91a. Furthermore, TSO-C91/91a ELTs are being replaced / supplemented by the TSO C126 406 MHz[29] ELT, a far superior unit.[30]

ELTs are unique among distress radiobeacons in that they have impact monitors and are activated by g-force.

Although monitoring of 121.5 and 243 MHz (Class B) distress signals by satellite ceased in February 2009, the FAA has not mandated an upgrade of older ELT units to 406 MHz in United States aircraft.[31] Transport Canada has put forward a proposed regulatory requirement that requires upgrade to Canadian registered aircraft to either a 406 MHz ELT or an alternate means system; however, elected officials have overruled the recommendation of Transport Canada for the regulation and have asked for a looser regulation to be drafted by Transport Canada.[32][33] Recent information indicates Transport Canada may permit private, general aviation flight with only an existing 121.5 MHz ELT if there is a placard visible to all passengers stating to the effect that the aircraft does not comply with international recommendations for the carriage of the 406 MHz emergency alerting device and is not detectable by satellites in the event of a crash.[34]

In the case of 121.5 MHz beacons, the frequency is known in aviation as the "VHF Guard" emergency frequency, and all U.S. civilian pilots (private and commercial) are required, by FAA policy, to monitor this frequency when it is possible to do so. The frequency can be used by Automatic Direction Finder (ADF) radionavigation equipment, which is being phased out in favor of VOR and GPS but is still found on many aircraft.[citation needed][clarification needed] ELTs are relatively large, and would fit in a cube about 30 cm (12 in) on a side, and weigh 2 to 5 kg (4.4 to 11.0 lb).

ELTs were first mandated in 1973 by FAA technical standard order (TSO-C91). The original TSO-C91, and updated TSO-C91A[35] were officially deprecated as of February 2, 2009, when reception of the 121.5 MHz signal was deactivated on all of the SAR satellite, in favor of the C126 ELT models, with their 406 MHz Cospas-Sarsat beacons. However, the 121.5 MHz signal is still used for close-in direction finding of a downed aircraft.

ELT activation

Automatic ELTs have impact monitors activated by g-force.

ELT sub-classification

Emergency locator transmitters (ELTs) for aircraft may be classed as follows:[36]

  • A: automatically ejected
  • AD: automatic deployable
  • F: Fixed
  • AF: automatic fixed
  • AP: automatic portable
  • W: water activated
  • S: survival

Within these classes, an ELT may be either a digital 406 MHz beacon, or an analog beacon (see below).

Obsolete ELTs

  • Any ELT that is not a 406 MHz ELT with a Hex Code became obsolete February 1, 2009.

According to the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration, ground testing of A-, B-, and S-type ELTs is to be done within the first 5 minutes of each hour. Testing is restricted to three audio sweeps.[37] Type I and II devices (those transmitting at 406 MHz) have a self test function and must not be activated except in an actual emergency.

Timeline of ELT development

  • Automatic SOS radios were developed as early as the 1930s.[38]
  • The United States Air Force institutes development of a "Crash-Locator Beacon" and a "Crash-Locator Bearing Recorder" in the early 1950s.[39]
  • In the UK, by 1959 the first automatic beacon for liferafts had been produced by Ultra Electronics, and at the same time Burndept produced the TALBE (Talk and Listen Beacon Equipment)[1] - VHF, and SARBE - Search-And-Rescue-Beacon Equipment (UHF) range of beacons which were used by the Fleet Air Arm and later, Royal Air Force. Later, SARBE beacons included a radio for voice communication by the survivor with the rescuing personnel.[40]
  • Jan 9 1964: FAA Advisory Circular 170-4 investigated ELTs
  • Mar 17 1969: FAA Advisory Circular 91-19 advised pilots to install ELTs
  • A Saturday Evening Post article covered the death of 16-year-old Carla Corbus, who survived, though badly injured, along with her mother, for 54 days after the plane her step-dad was flying crashed in the Trinity Alps of California in March 1967. He was lost and died in the woods looking for rescue.
  • The winter 1969 search for the Hawthorne Nevada Airlines Flight 708 "Gamblers' Special" DC-3 that crashed on February 18, 1969 in the Sierra Nevada Mountains. Five aircraft crashed and five searchers were killed while trying to find Flight 708.[41]
  • Carriage requirements for emergency locator beacons on most US non-jet powered fixed-wing civil aircraft became law on December 29, 1970, with the signing of Senate bill S.2193, "The Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970," Public Law 91-596.[42][43] as a last-minute rider to the Occupational Safety and Health Act. Senator Peter Dominick (R-Colorado) added the unrelated beacon language as a rider to the bill, which became section 31 of the law. (Earlier in the session he tried to add the requirements as an amendment to House bill H.R. 14465, the "Airport and Airways Development Act of 1969," but was unsuccessful.[44]) It required most general aviation aircraft to install ELTs by Dec. 30, 1973, and it preempted all the state ELT laws. The federal ELT law left the matter of alerting vague, although the initial idea was alerting by over flying aircraft which could receive an ELT's 75-milliwatt signal from 50 nautical miles away. The law set the compliance dates as one year after passage for newly manufactured or imported aircraft (December 30, 1971), and three years for existing aircraft (December 30, 1973). In response to the law, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) published on March 13, 1971, Notice of Proposed Rule Making (NPRM) 71–7 with the proposed amendments to the Federal Aviation Regulations (FAR).[45] After public comment, the final rules were published in the Federal Register on September 21, 1971.[46]
  • The disappearance of U.S. Congressmen Hale Boggs and Nick Begich in a general aviation aircraft on October 16, 1972 sparked the then largest ever search and rescue effort, which proved fruitless. This high-profile event further hastened the mandating of ELTs aboard aircraft.[47]
  • The RTCA published DO-145, DO-146, and DO-147, which the FAA then adopted the three DO documents as Technical Standard Order TSO C91.
  • After problems with the C-91 ELTs, The FAA responded to the defective early ELTs by outlawing the installation of C-91 ELTs and certifying C91a ELTs with an improved gravity switch, improved crash and fire-worthy casing, and batteries that work in colder temperatures.
  • March 16, 1973: AC 20–85, Emergency Locator Transmitters and Receivers
  • Dec 23, 1992: TSO-C126, 406 MHz Emergency Locator Transmitter (ELT)[48] defines the 406 MHz ELT

Emergency Position-Indicating Radio Beacon

Emergency Position-Indicating Radio Beacons (EPIRBs) are a development of the ELT designed specifically for use on boats and ships, and basic models tend to be less expensive than ELTs (average cost is $800[25]). As such, instead of using an impact sensor to activate the beacon, they typically use a water-sensing device or a submerged-sensing device that activates and releases a floating beacon after it has been submerged in between 1 and 4 meters of water. In addition to the 406 MHz signal mandated by C/S T.001, the IMO and ICAO require an auxiliary 121.5 MHz at another frequency in order to support the large installed base of 121.5 MHz direction finding equipment.

The RTCM (Radio Technical Commission for Maritime Services) maintains specifications specific to EPIRB devices. The alarm signal is defined as an AM signal (A3X and/or N0N emissions), containing a swept tone ranging from 1600 Hz to 300 Hz (either upwards or downwards), with 2-4 sweeps per second.[26][27]

EPIRBs with an AIS transmitter are allocated MMSI numbers in the range 974yyzzzz.

 
An EPIRB alerts the Coast Guard of a vessels emergency with the GPS coordinates taking the Search out of Search and Rescue

EPIRB sub-classification

Emergency position-indicating radio beacons (EPIRBs) are sub-classified as follows:[16]

Recognized categories:

  • Category I – 406/121.5 MHz. Float-free, automatically activated EPIRB. Detectable by satellite anywhere in the world. Recognized by GMDSS.
  • Category II – 406/121.5 MHz. Similar to Category I, except is manually activated. Some models are also water activated.

Obsolete classes:

  • Class A – 121.5/243 MHz. Float-free, automatically activating. Due to limited signal coverage and possible lengthy delays in signal recognition, the U.S. Coast Guard no longer recommends use of this type. These devices have been phased out by the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and are no longer recognized.
  • Class B – 121.5/243 MHz. Manually activated version of Class A. These devices have been phased out by the FCC and are no longer recognized.
  • Class S – 121.5/243 MHz. Similar to Class B, except it floats, or is an integral part of a survival craft (lifeboat) or survival suit. These devices have been phased out by the FCC and are no longer recognized. Their use is no longer recommended by the U.S. Coast Guard.
  • Class C – Marine VHF ch15/16. Manually activated, these beacons operate on maritime channels only, and therefore are not detectable by satellite or normal aircraft. Designed for small crafts operating close to shore, this type was only recognized in the United States. Use of these units was phased out in 1999. These devices have been phased out by the FCC and are no longer recognized.
  • Inmarsat-E – This entered service in 1997 and service ended 1 December 2006; all former users have switched to Category I or II 406 MHz EPIRBs. These beacons were float-free, automatically activated EPIRBs operated on 1646 MHz and were detectable by the Inmarsat geostationary satellite system, and were recognized by GMDSS, but not by the United States. In September 2004, Inmarsat announced that it was terminating its Inmarsat E EPIRB service as of December 2006 due to a lack of interest in the maritime community.[49]
  • Furthermore, the U.S. Coast Guard recommend that no EPIRB of any type manufactured before 1989 be used.

EPIRBs are a component of the Global Maritime Distress and Safety System (GMDSS). Most commercial off-shore working vessels with passengers are required to carry a self-deploying EPIRB, while most in-shore and fresh-water craft are not.

As part of the United States efforts to prepare beacon users for the end of 121.5 MHz frequency processing by satellites, the FCC has prohibited the use of 121.5 MHz EPIRBs as of January 1, 2007 (47 CFR 80.1051). See NOAA's statement on the 121.5/243 phaseout 2018-02-09 at the Wayback Machine.

EPIRB activation

Automatic EPIRBs are water activated. Some EPIRBs also "deploy"; this means that they physically depart from their mounting bracket on the exterior of the vessel (usually by going into the water.)

For a marine EPIRB to begin transmitting a signal (or "activate") it first needs to come out of its bracket (or "deploy"). Deployment can happen either manually where someone must physically remove it from its bracket or automatically where water pressure will cause a hydrostatic release unit to separate the EPIRB from its bracket. If it does not come out of the bracket it will not activate. There is a magnet in the bracket which operates a reed safety switch in the EPIRB. This prevents accidental activation if the unit gets wet from rain or shipped seas.

Once deployed, EPIRBs can be activated, depending on the circumstances, either manually (crewman flicks a switch) or automatically (when water contacts the unit's "sea-switch".) All modern EPIRBs provide both methods of activation and deployment, and thus are labelled "Manual and Automatic Deployment and Activation."

Automatic hydrostatic release unit

A hydrostatic release unit is designed to deploy automatically when submerged to a prescribed depth; the pressure of the water activates a mechanism which releases the EPIRB.

 
EPIRB hydrostatic release mechanism

Submarine Emergency Positioning Indicating Radio Beacon

A Submarine Emergency Positioning Indicating Radio Beacon (SEPIRB) is an EPIRB that is approved for use on submarines. Two are carried on board and can be fired from the submerged signal ejectors.[50]

Ship Security Alert System

A Ship Security Alert System (SSAS) is a special variety of an EPIRB designed to alert the ship's owner(s) of a possible piracy or terrorist attack. They thus have several distinguishing operational differences:

  • They are manually activated by hidden buttons or switches, much like the alarms bank tellers use.
  • They are prohibited from emitting a homing signal on 121.5 MHz so as to make transmissions more covert.
  • The COSPAS-SARSAT system sends the distress message to the vessel's country of origin, regardless of the location of the vessel.

As with EPIRBs, the RTCM maintains specifications for SSAS devices.

Personal Locator Beacon

 
Personal Locator Beacon now include GPS, White and IR Strobe Lights and Return Link Service.

Personal Locator Beacons (PLBs) are designed for use by individuals who are hiking, kayaking, or conducting other activities on land or water where they are not in or associated with an aircraft or vessel that is equipped with its own ELT or EPIRB. As with EPIRBs, the RTCM maintains specifications for PLB devices.

PLBs vary in size from cigarette-packet to paperback book and weigh 200 g to 1 kg (12 to 215 lb). They can be purchased from marine suppliers, aircraft refitters, and (in Australia and the United States) hiking supply stores. The units have a useful life of 10 years, operate across a range of conditions −40 to 40 °C (−40 to 104 °F), and transmit for 24 to 48 hours.[51]

The radiotelephony locator beacon sound made by PLBs and some EPIRBs.

The alarm signal is defined as an AM signal (A3X and/or N0N emissions), containing a swept tone ranging from 300 Hz to 1600 Hz (upwards), with 2–4 sweeps per second. PLBs shall sweep upward.[26][27]

PLB alerts are passed to State and Local agencies.[8]

They must be registered to a specific person (with NOAA in the U.S.).

PLB equipment is required to include 406 MHz plus a homing frequency on 121.5 MHz.[52]

As of 2017, PLBs must have an internal GPS.[53]

PLB sub-classification

There are two kinds of personal locator beacon (PLB):

  • PLB with GPS data (internally or externally provided)
  • PLB with no GPS data

All PLBs transmit in digital mode on 406 MHz. There are AIS PLBs that transmit on VHF 70.

Personal locator beacons operating on 406 MHz must be registered. PLBs should not be used in cases where normal emergency response (such as 9-1-1) exists.

Obsolete PLBs

  • U.S. Military forces at one time used 121.5/243.0 MHz beacons such as the "PRC-106," which had a built-in VHF radio. The military is replacing them with modern 406 MHz PLBs.[citation needed]

Beacon content

The most important aspect of a beacon in classification is the mode of transmission. There are two valid transmission modes: digital and analog. Where digital usually has a longer range, analog is more reliable. Analog beacons are useful to search parties and SAR aircraft, though they are no longer monitored by satellite.

Analog 121.500 MHz homing signal

The radiotelephony locator beacon sound made by ELTs and some EPIRBs.

All ELTs, all PLBs, and most EPIRBs are required to have a low-power homing signal, that is identical to the original 121.500 MHz VHF beacon signal. However, due to the extremely large number of false alarms that the old beacons generated, the transmit power was greatly reduced, and because the VHF transmitter typically uses the same antenna as the UHF beacon, the radiated signal is further reduced by the inherent inefficiencies of transmitting with an antenna not tuned to the transmitted signal.

Digital 406 MHz beacons

406 MHz UHF beacons transmit bursts of digital information to orbiting satellites, and may also contain a low-power integrated analog (121.500 MHz) homing beacon. They can be uniquely identified (via GEOSAR). Advanced beacons encode a GPS or GLONASS position into the signal. All beacons are located by Doppler triangulation to confirm the location. The digital data identifies the registered user. A phone call by authorities to the registered phone number often eliminates false alarms (false alarms are the typical case). If there is a problem, the beacon location data guides search and rescue efforts. No beacon is ignored. Anonymous beacons are confirmed by two Doppler tracks before beginning beacon location efforts.

The distress message transmitted by a 406 beacon contains the information such as:

  • Which country the beacon originates from.
  • A unique 15-digit hexadecimal beacon identification code (a "15-hex ID").
  • The encoded identification of the vessel or aircraft in distress, either as an MMSI value, or as, in the case of an ELT, either the aircraft's registration or its ICAO 24-bit address (from its Mode-S transponder).
  • When equipped, a GPS position.
  • Whether or not the beacon contains a 121.5 MHz homing transmitter.

The digital distress message generated by the beacon varies according to the above factors and is encoded in 30 hexadecimal characters. The unique 15-character digital identity (the 15-hex ID) is hard-coded in the firmware of the beacon. The 406.025 MHz carrier signal is modulated plus or minus 1.1 radians with the data encoded using Manchester encoding, which ensures a net zero phase shift aiding Doppler location[54]

406 MHz beacon facts and transmission schedule

  • 406 MHz beacons transmit for a quarter of a second immediately when turned on, and then transmit a digital burst once every 50 seconds thereafter. Both GEOSAR and LEOSAR satellites monitor these signals.
  • The repetition period shall not be so stable that any two transmitters appear to be synchronized closer than a few seconds over a 5-minute period. The intent is that no two beacons will have all of their bursts coincident. The period shall be randomised around a mean value of 50 seconds, so that time intervals between transmission are randomly distributed on the interval 47.5 to 52.5 seconds. (specification for first-generation beacons)[55]
  • Preliminary specification for second-generation beacons. From beacon activation a total of [6] initial transmissions shall be made separated by fixed [5s ± 0.1s] intervals. The first transmission shall commence within [3] seconds of beacon activation. Transmissions shall then occur at nominally [30] second intervals until [30 ± 1] minutes after beacon activation. The repetition period between the start of two successive transmissions shall be randomised around the stated nominal value, so that intervals between successive transmissions are randomly distributed over ± [5] seconds. Subsequent transmissions [TBD].[56]
  • 406 MHz beacons will be the only beacons compatible with the MEOSAR (DASS) system.[57]
  • 406 MHz beacons must be registered (see below).

Hex codes

Example hex codes look like the following: 90127B92922BC022FF103504422535[58]

  • A bit telling whether the message is short (15 hex digits) or long (30 hex digits) format.
  • A country code, which lets the worldwide COSPAS/SARSAT central authority identify the national authority responsible for the beacon.
  • Embedded 15-Hex ID or 15-hex transmitted distress message, for example, 2024F72524FFBFF The hex ID is printed or stamped on the outside of the beacon and is hard-coded into its firmware. The 15-hex ID can only be reprogrammed by certified distress radiobeacon technicians. The national authority uses this number to look up phone numbers and other contact information for the beacon. This is crucial to handle the large number of false alarms generated by beacons.
  • A location protocol number, and type of location protocol: EPIRB or MMSI, as well as all the data fields of that location protocol. If the beacon is equipped with GPS or GLONASS, a rough (rounded) latitude and longitude giving the beacon's current position. In some aircraft beacons, this data is taken from the aircraft's navigation system.
  • When a beacon is sold to another country, the purchaser is responsible for having the beacon reprogrammed with a new country code and to register it with their nation's beacon registry, and the seller is responsible to de-register the deprecated beacon ID with their national beacon registry.
  • One can use the beacon decoder web page[59] at Cospas-Sarsat to extract the 15-hex ID from the 30-hex distress message.

Frequencies

Distress beacons transmit distress signals on the following key frequencies; the frequency used distinguishes the capabilities of the beacon. A recognized beacon can operate on one of the three (currently) Cospas-Sarsat satellite-compatible frequencies. In the past, other frequencies were also used as a part of the search and rescue system.

Cospas-Sarsat (satellite) compatible beacon frequencies

  • see above for transmission schedule
  • 406 MHz UHF- carrier signal at 406.025-406.076 MHz ± 0.005 MHz[60]

Channel frequency (status)[61][62]

  • Ch-1 A: 406.022 MHz (reference)
  • Ch-2 B: 406.025 MHz (in use today)
  • Ch-3 C: 406.028 MHz (in use today)
  • Ch-4 D: 406.031 MHz
  • Ch-5 E: 406.034 MHz
  • Ch-6 F: 406.037 MHz (in use today)
  • Ch-7 G: 406.040 MHz (in use today)
  • Ch-8 H: 406.043 MHz
  • Ch-9 I: 406.046 MHz
  • Ch-10 J: 406.049 MHz (operational at a future date)
  • Ch-11 K: 406.052 MHz (operational at a future date)
  • Ch-12 L: 406.055 MHz
  • Ch-13 M: 406.058 MHz
  • Ch-14 N: 406.061 MHz (operational at a future date)
  • Ch-15 O: 406.064 MHz (operational at a future date)
  • Ch-16 P: 406.067 MHz
  • Ch-17 Q: 406.070 MHz
  • Ch-18 R: 406.073 MHz (operational at a future date)
  • Ch-19 S: 406.076 MHz (operational at a future date)

Cospas-Sarsat unsupported beacon frequencies

  • Marine VHF radio channels 15/16 – these channels are used only on the obsolete Class C EPIRBs
  • The obsolete Inmarsat-E beacons transmitted to Inmarsat satellites on 1646 MHz UHF.
  • 121.5 MHz VHF ± 6 kHz (frequency band protected to ±50 kHz)[63] (Satellite detection ceased on 1 February 2009,[64] but this frequency is still used for short-range location during a search and rescue operation)
  • 243.0 MHz UHF ± 12 kHz (frequency band protected to ± 100 kHz)[63][65] (prior to 1 February 2009 – COSPAS-SARSAT Compatible)

License and registration requirements

License

In North America and Australasia (and most jurisdictions in Europe) no special license is required to operate an EPIRB. In some countries (for example the Netherlands[66]) a marine radio operators license is required. The following paragraphs define other requirements relating to EPIRBs, ELTs, and PLBs.

Registration

All distress alerting beacons operating on 406 MHz should be registered; all vessels and aircraft operating under International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea (SOLAS) and International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) regulations must register their beacons. Some national administrations (including the United States, Canada, Australia, and the UK) also require registration of 406 MHz beacons.

  • There is no charge to register 406 MHz beacons.
  • The U.S. Coast Guard warns that a user's "life may be saved as a result of registered emergency information" because it can respond more quickly to signals from registered beacons.[16]
  • Unless the national registry authority advises otherwise, personal information contained in a beacon is used exclusively for SAR distress alert resolution purposes.

The provides the status of 406 MHz beacon regulations in specific countries and extracts of some international regulations pertaining to 406 MHz beacons.

The following list shows the agencies accepting 406 beacon registrations by country:

Specifications

Several regulations and technical specifications govern emergency locator beacons:

  • FAA
    • AC 20–85, Emergency Locator Transmitters and Receivers, March 16, 1973
    • AC 170-4 Jan 9 1964 investigated ELTs
    • AC 91-19 mar 17 1969 advised pilots to install ELTs
    • TSO-C91
    • TSO-C91a[67]
    • TSO-C126: 406 MHz Emergency Locator Transmitter (ELT)
    • TSO-C126a: 406 MHz Emergency Locator Transmitter (ELT)
    • TSO-C126b: 406 MHz Emergency Locator Transmitter (ELT)
  • Radio Technical Commission for Aeronautics
    • DO-127?
    • DO-145
    • DO-146
    • DO-147
  • Radio Technical Commission for Maritime Services
    • Special Committee (SC) 110 on Emergency Beacons (EPIRBs and PLBs)
    • Special Committee (SC) 119 on Maritime Survivor Locator Devices
    • Special Committee (SC) 121 on Automatic Identification Systems (AIS) and digital Messaging
    • Special Committee (SC) 128 on Satellite Emergency Notification Device (SEND)
  • Cospas-Sarsat
    • C/S A.001: Cospas-Sarsat Data Distribution Plan
    • C/S A.002: Cospas-Sarsat Mission Control Centres Standard Interface Description
    • C/S T.001 Specification for COSPAS-SARSAT 406 MHz Distress Beacons[68]
    • C/S T.007: COSPAS‑SARSAT 406 MHz Distress Beacons Type Approval Standard
    • C/S T.015: Specification and Type Approval Standard for 406 MHz Ship Security Alert Beacons
    • C/S G.003, Introduction to the Cospas-Sarsat System
    • C/S G.004, Cospas-Sarsat Glossary
    • C/S G.005, Guidelines on 406 MHz Beacon Coding, Registration, and Type Approval[69]
    • C/S S.007, Handbook of Beacon Regulations
  • IMO
  • ITU
    • Recommendation ITU-R M.633 (IMO's technical requirements for the 406 MHz EPIRB signal)
    • Report ITU-R M.2285-0 Maritime survivor locating systems and devices (man overboard systems) -- An overview of systems and their mode of operation[70]
  • ICAO
  • IEC
    • IEC 61097-2: Global maritime distress and safety system (GMDSS) - Part 2: COSPASSARSAT EPIRB - Satellite emergency position indicating radio beacon operating on 406 MHz - Operational and performance requirements, methods of testing and required test results

EPIRB hydrostatic release device requirements

  • Safety of Life a Sea Convention
    • SOLAS 74.95
  • ISO
    • ISO 15734
  • U.S. Federal Regulations
    • CFR title 46 Vol 6 Section 160.062
  • U.S. Coast Guard Regulations
    • USCG 160.162[71]
      • Corrosion resistance test
      • Temperature tests
      • Submergence and manual release test
      • Strength tests
      • Technical tests on the membrane
      • Performance test

Alternative technologies

There are also other personal devices in the marketplace which do not meet the standard for 406 MHz devices.

Maritime Survivor Locator Device

A Maritime Survivor Locator Device (MSLD) is a man-overboard locator beacon. In the U.S., rules were established in 2016 in 47 C.F.R. Part 95

MOB devices with DSC or AIS are allocated MMSI numbers in the range 972yyzzzz.

A MSLD may transmit on 121.500 MHz, or one of these: 156.525 MHz, 156.750 MHz, 156.800 MHz, 156.850 MHz, 161.975 MHz, 162.025 MHz (bold are Canadian-required frequencies). Although sometimes defined in the same standards as the COSPAS-SARSAT beacons, MSLDs can not be detected by that satellite network, and are instead intended only for short-range Direction finding equipment mounted on the vessel on which the survivor was traveling.

AIS SART

These devices are distinct from traditional SAR radar transponders (SART), as they transmit AIS messages containing accurate GPS position information and include a GPS receiver and a transmitter on VHF AIS channels, so they show up on ship AIS receivers. They are lightweight and can be used to equip inflatable liferafts.

AIS-SART devices are allocated MMSI numbers in the range 970YYxxxx.

SEND—Satellite Emergency Notification Device

These devices are commonly referred to as SEND (Satellite Emergency Notification Device), and examples include SPOT and inReach.

APRS

APRS is used by amateur radio operators to track positions and send short messages. Most APRS packets contain a GPS latitude and longitude, so they can be used for both normal and emergency tracking. They also are routed to the Internet, where they are archived for some period of time, and viewable by others. There are several emergency packet types that can indicate distress. Since it is part of the amateur radio service, it costs nothing to transmit on and uses the extensive network, however, one must be a licensed amateur radio operator. There is also no guarantee that an APRS distress packet report would be seen or handled by emergency responders. It would have to be seen by an amateur radio operator and forwarded on.

See also

Notes

  1. ^
  2. ^ ITU Radio Regulations, Section IV. Radio Stations and Systems – Article 1.93, definition: emergency position-indicating radiobeacon station
  3. ^ a b O'Connors, Chris. "Cospas-Sarsat System Overview" (PDF).
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 2012-08-06. Retrieved 9 Oct 2012.
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 15 September 2012. Retrieved 9 October 2012.
  6. ^ Milovanovich, C. (7 May 2009). (PDF). Lawlink. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 March 2011. Retrieved 20 February 2010.
  7. ^ . Archived from the original on February 19, 2014.
  8. ^ a b "Civil Air Patrol, Maryland Wing Conference, Locating 121.5 & 406 MHz Emergency Beacons" (PDF).
  9. ^ "SARSAT U.S. Rescues".
  10. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-04-26. Retrieved 2018-02-08.
  11. ^ See COSPAS-SARSAT document A.001, 2005
  12. ^ Friess, Steve (September 11, 2007). "Aircraft beacon has become utterly outmoded, FAA says". The New York Times.
  13. ^ . Archived from the original on 2018-02-09. Retrieved 2018-02-08.
  14. ^ a b (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-09-29. Retrieved 2018-02-08.
  15. ^ "U.S. Coast Guard Rescue Coordination Centers (RCCs)".
  16. ^ a b c "Emergency Position Indicating Radiobeacon (EPIRB)". www.navcen.uscg.gov.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Participants".
  18. ^ "Report to the Maritime Safety Committee" (PDF).
  19. ^ . BoatUS Magazine. March 2007.
  20. ^ . National Transportation Safety Board. 4 September 2007.
  21. ^ "NTSB to FAA: Require 406 MHz ELTs | Doug Ritter's Equipped.org Blog".
  22. ^ McDonald, Samuel (2015-07-29). "Second Crash Test Harvests Valuable Data to Improve Emergency Response". NASA.
  23. ^ Kauh, Elaine (2015-08-26). "NASA Completes ELT Crash Tests". AVweb.
  24. ^ NASA crash video on YouTube
  25. ^ a b (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2005-09-05. Retrieved 2018-02-06.
  26. ^ a b c (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-06-14.
  27. ^ a b c "RSS-287—Emergency Position Indicating Radio Beacons (EPIRB), Emergency Locator Transmitters (ELT), Personal Locator Beacons (PLB), and Maritime Survivor Locator Devices (MSLD)". August 2001.
  28. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-04-26. Retrieved 2018-02-08.
  29. ^ . www.airweb.faa.gov. Archived from the original on 2007-12-05. Retrieved 2007-09-06.
  30. ^ . July 19, 2011. Archived from the original on July 19, 2011.
  31. ^ "Emergency Locator Transmitters". rgl.faa.gov.
  32. ^ Regulations Amending the Canadian Aviation Regulations (Parts I and VI – ELT) 2015-03-25 at the Wayback Machine Canada Gazette
  33. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-05-15. Retrieved 2009-11-20.
  34. ^ Hunt, Adam (July 27, 2009). "COPA Flight 8 Ottawa: July 2009 Update on 4006 MHz ELTs".
  35. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-07-04. Retrieved 2007-09-06.
  36. ^ "RSS-187, Emergency Position Indicating Radio Beacons, Emergency Locator Transmitters, Personal Locator Beacons, and Maritime Survivor Locator Devices" (PDF).[permanent dead link]
  37. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-10-12. Retrieved 2009-09-22.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  38. ^ "Another Automatic SOS" Flight 15 September 1938 p241
  39. ^ "Down at Sea" (PDF). Flying Safety. Vol. 7, no. 5. Inspector General, Department of the Air Force. May 1951. p. 4. Retrieved 11 July 2021.
  40. ^ "Flight magazine, 18 September, 1959".
  41. ^ "Family gets answers about mysterious plane crash in 1969".
  42. ^ Congressional Record, Volume 116, December 30, 1970, pages 44,064-44,065
  43. ^ Winston, Donald C. (September 20, 1971). "Civil Aviation Bills Facing Uncertain Fate in Congress". Aviation Week and Space Technology. Vol. 95, no. 12. pp. 54–55. Retrieved October 10, 2017.
  44. ^ Cong. Rec., Vol. 116, May 12, 1970, pages 15,134-15,136
  45. ^ Federal Register, Volume 36, Number 50, March 13, 1971, pages 4,878-4,881
  46. ^ FR 36-183, September 21, 1971, pages 18,716-18,725
  47. ^ . Archived from the original on 2019-05-06. Retrieved 2018-02-08.
  48. ^ "TSO-C126, 406 MHz Emergency Locator Transmitter (ELT)" (PDF).
  49. ^ . Archived from the original on December 9, 2006.
  50. ^ Canadian Coast Guard (2017). "Notice 34 Information Concerning Submarines".
  51. ^ (PDF). cospas-sarsat.com. May 20, 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 20, 2006.
  52. ^ "RSS-287—Emergency Position Indicating Radio Beacons (EPIRB), Emergency Locator Transmitters (ELT), Personal Locator Beacons (PLB), and Maritime Survivor Locator Devices (MSLD)". August 2001.
  53. ^ "2017 FCC Marine Communications Rule Changes" (PDF).
  54. ^ Albert Helfrick, Principles of Avionics, 5th Edition, Avionics Communications, 2009 ISBN 1885544278, p 287
  55. ^ "SPECIFICATION FOR COSPAS-SARSAT 406 MHz DISTRESS BEACONS C/S T.001 Issue 3 – Revision 15" (PDF). International Cospas-Sarsat Programme. October 2014.
  56. ^ "SPECIFICATION FOR SECOND-GENERATION COSPAS-SARSAT 406-MHz DISTRESS BEACONS C/S T.018 Preliminary Issue A" (PDF). International Cospas-Sarsat Programme. October 2014.
  57. ^ . Archived from the original on March 4, 2016.
  58. ^
  59. ^ beacon decoder webpage, When one enters the transmitted (i.e. GPS-location-included) 15-hex into the decoder, the unmodified 15-hex ID is printed at the bottom of the output of the Beacon Decoder page. This method can be used to confirm that a beacon is encoding the correct 15-hex ID (as printed on the side of the beacon) into its distress messages. URL updated 26 March 2021.
  60. ^ [permanent dead link]
  61. ^ "COSPAS-SARSAT 406 MHz FREQUENCYMANAGEMENT PLAN C/S T.012 Issue 1 – Revision 10" (PDF). International Cospas-Sarsat Programme. October 2014.
  62. ^ "Handbook on Radio Frequency Spectrum Requirements for Civil Aviation including Statement of Approved ICAO Policies" (PDF) (Fifth ed.). ICAO. 2009. Doc 9718-AN/957.
  63. ^ a b "RSS-187, Emergency Position Indicating Radio Beacons, Emergency Locator Transmitters, Personal Locator Beacons, and Maritime Survivor Locator Devices" (PDF).[permanent dead link]
  64. ^ Sport Aviation: 10. March 2009. {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  65. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-10-09. Retrieved 2007-10-01.
  66. ^ . March 25, 2013. Archived from the original on March 25, 2013.
  67. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-07-04. Retrieved 2007-09-06.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  68. ^ "C/S T.001 Specification for COSPAS-SARSAT 406 MHz Distress Beacons" (PDF).
  69. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-02-08. Retrieved 2018-02-07.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  70. ^ "Report ITU-R M.2285-0 Maritime survivor locating systems and devices (man overboard systems) -- An overview of systems and their mode of operation" (PDF).
  71. ^ Life-saving appliances: including LSA code/ International Maritime Organization (2nd ed.). London. 2010. ISBN 9789280115079.

References

  • COSPAS-SARSAT, Document C/S T.001 October 1999
  • FCC, Part 80 and GMDSS
  • MED, 0735/2001
  • RTCM, Standard for 406 MHz Satellite EPIRBs

External links

  • Cospas-Sarsat – the International Satellite System For Search and Rescue
  • ITU – Maritime mobile Access and Retrieval System (MARS)
  • NOAA SARSAT website
  • NOAA notice of planned phasing out of 121.5/243 MHz beacons in 2009 2021-05-22 at the Wayback Machine
  • Operation of a Hydrostatic Release Unit
  • "EEVblog #368 - EPIRB Teardown (Examination of the components of a 121/5/243Mhz Epirb)". YouTube. 9 October 2012. Archived from the original on 2021-12-11.
  • Rescue Coordination Centres (RCCs) and SAR Points of Contact (SPOCs)
  • RCC Messages
  • The History and Experience of the International COSPAS-SARSAT Programme for Satellite-Aided Search and Rescue 2017-01-21 at the Wayback Machine

emergency, position, indicating, radiobeacon, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, broader, coverage, this, topic, emergency, locator, beacon, emergency, position, indicating, radiobeacon, epirb, type, emergency, locator, beacon, commercial, recreatio. PLB redirects here For other uses see PLB disambiguation For broader coverage of this topic see Emergency locator beacon An emergency position indicating radiobeacon EPIRB is a type of emergency locator beacon for commercial and recreational boats a portable battery powered radio transmitter used in emergencies to locate boaters in distress and in need of immediate rescue In the event of an emergency such as a ship sinking or medical emergency onboard the transmitter is activated and begins transmitting a continuous 406 MHz distress radio signal which is used by search and rescue teams to quickly locate the emergency and render aid The signal is detected by satellites operated by an international consortium of rescue services COSPAS SARSAT which can detect emergency beacons anywhere on Earth transmitting on the distress frequency of 406 MHz The satellites calculate the position or utilize the GPS coordinates of the beacon and quickly passes the information to the appropriate local first responder organization which performs the search and rescue As Search and Rescue approach the search areas they use Direction Finding DF equipment to locate the beacon using the 121 5 MHz homing signal or in newer EPIRBs the AIS location signal The basic purpose of this system is to help rescuers find survivors within the so called golden day 1 the first 24 hours following a traumatic event during which the majority of survivors can usually be saved The feature distinguishing a modern EPIRB often called GPIRB from other types of emergency beacon is that it contains a GPS receiver and broadcasts its position usually accurate within 100 m 330 ft to facilitate location Previous emergency beacons without a GPS can only be localized to within 2 km 1 2 mi by the COSPAS satellites and relied heavily upon the 121 5 MHz homing signal to pin point the beacons location as they arrived on scene Overview diagram of COSPAS SARSAT communication system used to detect and locate ELTs EPIRBs and PLBs First generation EPIRB emergency locator beacons The standard frequency of a modern EPIRB is 406 MHz It is an internationally regulated mobile radiocommunication service that aids search and rescue operations to detect and locate distressed watercraft aircraft and people 2 It is distinct from a satellite emergency position indicating radiobeacon station The first form of these beacons was the 121 5 MHz ELT which was designed as an automatic locator beacon for crashed military aircraft These beacons were first used in the 1950s by the U S military and were mandated for use on many types of commercial and general aviation aircraft beginning in the early 1970s 3 The frequency and signal format used by the ELT beacons was not designed for satellite detection which resulted in a system with poor location detection abilities and long delays in detection of activated beacons The satellite detection network was built after the ELT beacons were already in general use with the first satellite not being launched until 1982 and even then the satellites only provided detection with location accuracy being roughly 20 km 12 mi 3 The technology was later expanded to cover use on vessels at sea EPIRB individual persons PLB and starting in 2016 maritime survivor locating devices MSLD citation needed All have migrated from using 121 500 MHz as their primary frequency to using 406 MHz which was designed for satellite detection and location citation needed Since the inception of Cospas Sarsat in 1982 distress radio beacons have assisted in the rescue of over 50 000 people in more than 7 000 distress situations 4 In 2010 alone the system provided information used to rescue 2 388 persons in 641 distress situations 5 Contents 1 Types of emergency locator beacons 2 International COSPAS SARSAT Programme 3 Detection and location 3 1 Beacon operation 3 1 1 GPS based registered 3 1 2 High precision registered 3 1 3 Traditional ELT unregistered 3 1 4 Location by Doppler without GPS 3 2 Satellites 4 Search and rescue response 4 1 Responsible agencies 4 1 1 Americas 4 1 1 1 United States 4 1 1 2 Canada 4 1 2 Europe 4 1 2 1 United Kingdom 4 1 3 Russia 4 1 4 Asia 5 Phase out of 121 5 MHz satellite alerting service 5 1 FAA transition status 6 Emergency Locator Transmitters 6 1 ELT activation 6 2 ELT sub classification 6 2 1 Obsolete ELTs 6 3 Timeline of ELT development 7 Emergency Position Indicating Radio Beacon 7 1 EPIRB sub classification 7 2 EPIRB activation 7 2 1 Automatic hydrostatic release unit 8 Submarine Emergency Positioning Indicating Radio Beacon 9 Ship Security Alert System 10 Personal Locator Beacon 10 1 PLB sub classification 10 1 1 Obsolete PLBs 11 Beacon content 11 1 Analog 121 500 MHz homing signal 11 2 Digital 406 MHz beacons 11 2 1 406 MHz beacon facts and transmission schedule 11 2 2 Hex codes 12 Frequencies 12 1 Cospas Sarsat satellite compatible beacon frequencies 12 2 Cospas Sarsat unsupported beacon frequencies 13 License and registration requirements 13 1 License 13 2 Registration 14 Specifications 14 1 EPIRB hydrostatic release device requirements 15 Alternative technologies 15 1 Maritime Survivor Locator Device 15 2 AIS SART 15 3 SEND Satellite Emergency Notification Device 15 4 APRS 16 See also 17 Notes 18 References 19 External linksTypes of emergency locator beacons EditThe several types of emergency locator beacons are distinguished by the environment for which they were designed to be used ELT emergency locator transmitters are carried on aircraft and are activated in the event of a crash Activated by G switch crash sensor or manually by cockpit remote switch or ON switch on ELT EPIRB emergency position indicating radio beacons are carried on ships and boats and signal maritime distress Activated by water when the beacon is out of the bracket or manually by the ON switch on the EPIRB SEPIRB submarine emergency position indicating radio beacons are EPIRBs designed only for use on submarines SSAS ship security alert systems are used to indicate possible piracy or terrorism attacks discreetly on sea going vessels Activated by discreet switch button in the ship s bridge or cabin or manually on the SSAS PLB personal locator beacons are carried by individuals and intended to indicate a person in distress who is away from normal emergency services e g 9 1 1 They are also used for crew saving applications in shipping and lifeboats at terrestrial systems In New South Wales some police stations and the NSW National Parks amp Wildlife Service provide personal locator beacons to hikers for no charge 6 Activated manually by deploying antenna and pressing the ON button switch Distress alerts transmitted from ELTs EPIRBs SSAS and PLBs are received and processed by the International Cospas Sarsat Programme the international satellite system for search and rescue SAR These beacons transmit a 406 MHz distress signal every 50 seconds varying over a span of 2 5 seconds to avoid multiple beacons always transmitting at the same time When manually activated or automatically activated upon immersion or impact such beacons send out a distress signal The signals are monitored worldwide and the location of the distress is detected by non geostationary satellites using the Doppler effect for trilateration and in more recent EPIRBs also by GPS 7 Loosely related devices including search and rescue transponders SART AIS SART avalanche transceivers and RECCO do not operate on 406 MHz thus are covered in separate articles International COSPAS SARSAT Programme EditCospas Sarsat is an international organization that has been a model of international cooperation even during the Cold War SARSAT means search and rescue satellite aided tracking COSPAS KOSPAS is an acronym for the Russian words COsmicheskaya Sistema Poiska Avariynyh Sudov Kosmicheskaya Sistema Poiska Avarijnyh Sudov which translates to space system for the search of vessels in distress A consortium of USSR the U S Canada and France formed the organization in 1982 Since then 29 other countries have joined The satellites used in the system include LEOSAR or Low Earth Orbiting Search and Rescue Satellites The LEOSAR system calculates the location of distress events using Doppler processing techniques Doppler processing is based upon the principle that the frequency of the distress beacon as heard by the satellite instrument is affected by the relative velocity of the satellite with respect to the beacon By monitoring the change of the beacon frequency of the received beacon signal and knowing the exact position of the satellite the LUT is able to calculate the location of the beacon GEOSAR or Geosynchronous Earth Orbiting Search and Rescue Satellites As a GEOSAR satellite remains fixed relative to the Earth rotating with the earth around the equator GEOSAR satellites utilize the GPS provided by the EPIRB PLB or ELT to provide rescuers with beacon position information MEOSAR or Mid Earth Orbiting Search and Rescue Satellites The newest of the Cospas Sarsat satellites detect EPIRB PLB and ELT distress signals in almost real time i e within 5 minutes including the beacons location with or without GPS The new MEOSAR system also provides the framework along with the Galileo Global Navigation Satellite System GNSS for EPIRBs PLBs and EPIRBs to utilize the new Return Link Service or RLS that provides a confirmation message from Search and Rescue back to the beacon to let the survivors know their distress message was confirmed Cospas Sarsat defines standards for beacons auxiliary equipment to be mounted on conforming weather and communication satellites ground stations and communications methods The satellites communicate the beacon data to their ground stations which forward it to main control centers of each nation that can initiate a rescue effort Cospas Sarsat Monitoring include Local User Terminals LUTs Mission Control Centers MCC Rescue Coordination Center RCC Detection and location Edit VHF radio direction finding A transmission is typically detected and processed in this manner The transmitter is activated either automatically in a crash or after sinking or manually by survivors of an emergency situation At least one satellite picks up the beacon s transmission The satellites transfer the beacon s signal to their respective ground control stations The ground stations process the signals and forward the data including approximate location to a national authority The national authority forwards the data to a rescue authority The rescue authority uses its own receiving equipment afterwards to locate the beacon and commence its own rescue or recovery operations Once the satellite data is received less than a minute is needed to forward them to any signatory nation The primary means of detection and location is by the COSPAS SARSAT satellites However additional means of location are frequently used For example the FAA requires that all pilots monitor 121 500 MHz whenever possible and the USCG has a network of direction finder sites along the coastlines 8 The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration maintains a near real time map that shows SARSAT U S Rescues 9 Several systems are in use with beacons of varying expense different types of satellites and varying performance Carrying even the oldest systems provides an immense improvement in safety over carrying none The types of satellites in the network are LEOSAR Support Doppler detection and reception of encoded position Receivers are payloads on various Low Earth Orbit satellites MEOSAR Medium Earth Orbiting Search and Rescue Receivers are payloads on the U S GPS satellites on the Russian GLONASS satellites and on the European GALILEO satellites GEOSAR Supports only reception of encoded position Receivers are payloads on various geosynchronous satellites including some of the U S GOES weather satellites including GOES 16 When one of the COSPAS SARSAT satellites detects a beacon the detection is passed to one of the program s roughly 30 Mission Control Centers such as USMCC in Suitland Maryland where the detected location and beacon details are used to determine to which rescue coordination centre for example the U S Coast Guard s PACAREA RCC in Alameda California to pass the alert 10 Beacon operation Edit GPS based registered Edit The 406 MHz beacons with GPS track with a precision of 100 m in the 70 of the world closest to the equator and send a serial number so the responsible authority can look up phone numbers to notify the registrant e g next of kin in four minutes The GPS system permits stationary wide view geosynchronous communications satellites to enhance the Doppler position received by low Earth orbit satellites EPIRB beacons with built in GPS are usually called GPIRBs for GPS position indicating radio beacon or global position indicating radio beacon However rescue cannot begin until a Doppler track is available The COSPAS SARSAT specifications say 11 that a beacon location is not considered resolved unless at least two Doppler tracks match or a Doppler track confirms an encoded GPS track One or more GPS tracks are not sufficient High precision registered Edit An intermediate technology 406 MHz beacon now mostly obsolete in favor of GPS enabled units has worldwide coverage locates within 2 km 12 5 km2 search area notifies kin and rescuers in 2 hours maximum 46 min average and has a serial number to look up phone numbers etc This can take up to two hours because it has to use moving weather satellites to locate the beacon To help locate the beacon the beacon s frequency is controlled to 2 parts per billion and its power is five watts Both of the above types of beacons usually include an auxiliary 25 milliwatt beacon at 121 5 MHz to guide rescue aircraft Traditional ELT unregistered Edit The oldest cheapest beacons are aircraft ELTs that send an anonymous warble on the aviation band distress frequency at 121 5 MHz The frequency is often routinely monitored by commercial aircraft but has not been monitored by satellite since Feb 1 2009 12 These distress signals could be detected by satellite over only 60 of the earth required up to 6 hours for notification located within 20 km 12 mi search area of 1200 km2 were anonymous and could not be located well because their frequency is only accurate to 50 parts per million and the signals were broadcast using only 75 100 milliwatts of power Coverage was partial because the satellite had to be in view of both the beacon and a ground station at the same time the satellites did not store and forward the beacon s position Coverage in polar and Southern Hemisphere areas was poor False alarms were common as the beacon transmitted on the aviation emergency frequency with interference from other electronic and electrical systems To reduce false alarms a beacon was confirmed by a second satellite pass which could easily slow confirmation of a case of distress to as much as 4 hours although in rare circumstances the satellites could be positioned such that immediate detection becomes possible Location by Doppler without GPS Edit The Cospas Sarsat system was made possible by Doppler processing Local user terminals LUTs detecting nongeostationary satellites interpret the Doppler frequency shift heard by LEOSAR and MEOSAR satellites as they pass over a beacon transmitting at a fixed frequency The interpretation determines both bearing and range The range and bearing are measured from the rate of change of the heard frequency which varies both according to the path of the satellite in space and the rotation of the earth This triangulates the position of the beacon A faster change in the Doppler indicates that the beacon is closer to the satellite s orbit If the beacon is moving toward or away from the satellite track due to the Earth s rotation it is on one side or other of the satellite s path Doppler shift is zero at the closest point of approach between the beacon and the orbit If the beacon s frequency is more precise it can be located more precisely saving search time so modern 406 MHz beacons are accurate to 2 parts per billion giving a search area of only 2 km2 compared to the older beacons accurate to 50 parts per million that had 200 km2 of search area To increase the useful power and handle multiple simultaneous beacons modern 406 MHz beacons transmit in bursts and remain silent for about 50 seconds Russia developed the original system and its success drove the desire to develop the improved 406 MHz system The original system was a brilliant adaptation to the low quality beacons originally designed to aid air searches It used just a simple lightweight transponder on the satellite with no digital recorders or other complexities Ground stations listened to each satellite as long as it was above the horizon Doppler shift was used to locate the beacon s Multiple beacons were separated when a computer program analysed the signals with a fast fourier transform Also two satellite passes per beacon were used This eliminated false alarms by using two measurements to verify the beacon s location from two different bearings This prevented false alarms from VHF channels that affected a single satellite Regrettably the second satellite pass almost doubled the average time before notification of the rescuing authority However the notification time was much less than a day Satellites Edit Receivers are auxiliary systems mounted on several types of satellites This substantially reduces the program s cost The weather satellites that carry the SARSAT receivers are in ball of yarn orbits inclined at 99 degrees The longest period that all satellites can be out of line of sight of a beacon is about two hours The first satellite constellation was launched in the early 1970s by the Soviet Union Canada France and the United States Some geosynchronous satellites have beacon receivers Since the end of 2003 there are four such geostationary satellites GEOSAR that cover more than 80 of the surface of the earth As with all geosynchronous satellites they are located above the equator The GEOSAR satellites do not cover the polar caps Since they see the Earth as a whole they see the beacon immediately but have no motion and thus no Doppler frequency shift to locate it However if the beacon transmits GPS data the geosynchronous satellites give nearly instantaneous response Search and rescue response EditEmergency beacons operating on 406 MHz transmit a unique 15 22 or 30 character serial number called a hex code When the beacon is purchased the hex code should be registered with the relevant national or international authority After one of the mission control centers has detected the signal this registration information is passed to the rescue coordination center which then provides the appropriate search and rescue agency with crucial information such as phone numbers to call a description of the vessel aircraft vehicle or person in the case of a PLB the home port of a vessel or aircraft any additional information that may be useful to SAR agenciesRegistration information allows SAR agencies to start a rescue more quickly For example if a shipboard telephone number listed in the registration is unreachable it could be assumed that a real distress event is occurring Conversely the information provides a quick and easy way for the SAR agencies to check and eliminate false alarms potentially sparing the beacon s owner from significant false alert fines An unregistered 406 MHz beacon still carries some information such as the manufacturer and serial number of the beacon and in some cases an MMSI or aircraft tail number ICAO 24 bit address Despite the clear benefits of registration an unregistered 406 MHz beacon is very substantially better than a 121 5 MHz beacon because the hex code received from a 406 MHz beacon confirms the authenticity of the signal as a real distress signal Beacons operating on 121 5 MHz and 243 0 MHz only simply transmit an anonymous siren tone thus carry no position or identity information to SAR agencies Such beacons now rely solely on the terrestrial or aeronautical monitoring of the frequency Responsible agencies Edit RCCs are responsible for a geographic area known as a search and rescue region of responsibility SRR SRRs are designated by the International Maritime Organization and the International Civil Aviation Organization RCCs are operated unilaterally by personnel of a single military service e g an air force or a navy or a single civilian service e g a national police force or a coast guard Americas Edit These international search and rescue points of contact 13 receive SAR alerts from the USMCC 14 SPOC SRR Name Geographic Coverage SAR AgencyArgentina Servicio de Alerta de Socorro Satelital SASS ARMCCBermuda Maritime Operations Centre BERMUDASPCentral American Corporation for Navigation Area Services COCESNAColombia COLMSPDominican Republic DOMREPSPEcuador ECSPGuyana GUYSPMexico MEXISPMexico Telecommunications MEXTELNetherlands Antilles NANTSPPanama PANSPTrinidad and Tobago TTSPVenezuela VZMCCBolivia BOLSPChile RCC ChileRCCParaguay PARSPUruguay URSPUnited States Edit The U S NOAA operates the U S Mission Control Center USMCC in Suitland Maryland It distributes beacon signal reports to one or more of these RCCs 14 United States SPOCs RCC SRR name Geographic coverage SAR agency Phone numberAir Force Rescue Coordination Center AFRCC Land based emergency signals in the lower 48 states United States Air Force Auxiliary Civil Air PatrolAlaska Air National Guard operates the Alaska Rescue Coordination Center AKRCC Alaskan inland areas On shore beacons are investigated by local search and rescue services in Alaska U S Coast Guard 15 The Coast Guard investigates offshore beacons and rescues victims Coast Guard Atlantic Area LANTAREA 757 398 6700District 1 Boston MA RCC Boston CGD01 617 223 8555District 5 Portsmouth VA RCC Norfolk CGD05 757 398 6231District 7 Miami FL RCC Miami CGD07 305 415 6800District 8 New Orleans LA RCC New Orleans CGD08 504 589 6225District 9 Cleveland OH RCC Cleveland CGD09 216 902 6117District 11 Alameda CA RCC Alameda andPacific SAR Coordinator PACAREA 510 437 3701District 13 Seattle WA RCC Seattle CGD13 206 220 7001District 14 Honolulu HI RCC Honolulu operated as JRCC with DOD CGD14 808 535 3333District 17 Juneau AK RCC Juneau CGD17 907 463 2000U S Coast Guard Sector San Juan RSC sub sector of RCC Miami SANJN 787 289 2042U S Coast Guard Sector Guam RSC coordinates SAR under RCC Honolulu MARSEC 671 355 4824The US Coast Guard web page for EPIRBs states You may be fined for false activation of an unregistered EPIRB The US Coast Guard routinely refers cases involving the nondistress activation of an EPIRB e g as a hoax through gross negligence carelessness or improper storage and handling to the Federal Communications Commission The FCC will prosecute cases based upon evidence provided by the Coast Guard and will issue warning letters or notices of apparent liability for fines up to 10 000 16 Canada Edit The Canadian Mission Control Centre receives and distributes distress alerts In Canada the Canadian Coast Guard and Canadian Forces Search and Rescue Royal Canadian Air Force and Royal Canadian Navy are partners in Joint Rescue Co ordination Centres CCG operates Maritime Rescue Subcentres to offload work from JRCC RCC SRR Name Geographic Coverage SAR AgencyJoint Rescue Coordination Centre Halifax HALIFAX Halifax Search and Rescue RegionMaritime Rescue Sub Centre Quebec QuebecCity the St Lawrence River within the province of Quebec the northern and western waters of the Gulf of St Lawrence within the province of Quebec the navigable estuary portion of the Saguenay River the Richelieu River within the province of Quebec the southern portion of the Ottawa River downstream from the Carillon Generating StationJoint Rescue Coordination Centre Trenton TRENTON Trenton Search and Rescue Region AIRCOM also operates the Canadian Mission Control Centre CMCC from JRCC TrentonJoint Rescue Coordination Centre Victoria VICTORIA Victoria Search and Rescue RegionMaritime Rescue Sub Centre St John s waters surrounding the province of Newfoundland and LabradorEurope Edit United Kingdom Edit The United Kingdom the Department for Transport Maritime and Coastguard Agency operates the Mission Control Centre UKMCC which receives and distributes distress alerts In the UK the Distress and Diversion Cell of the Royal Air Force provides continuous monitoring of 121 5 MHz and 243 0 MHz with autotriangulation from a network of terrestrial receivers on both frequencies Russia Edit In Russia operations are supported by the Federal State Unitary Enterprise Morsvyazsputnik 17 Asia Edit In Hong Kong operations are supported by the Hong Kong Marine Department s 17 Hong Kong Maritime Rescue Co ordination Centre MRCC In India operations are supported by the Indian Space Research Organisation ISRO 17 and by the Indian Coast Guard s Maritime Rescue Coordination Centre Mumbai MRCC In China operations are supported by the Maritime Safety Administration Bureau of Harbour Superintendency 17 In Japan operations are supported by the Japan Coast Guard 17 In Vietnam operations are supported by the Ministry of Transport Vietnam Maritime Administration VINAMARINE 17 In Singapore operations are supported by the Civil Aviation Authority of Singapore 17 In the Republic of Korea operations are supported by the Korea Coast Guard 17 In Indonesia operations are supported by the National SAR Agency of Indonesia BASARNAS 17 In Taiwan operations are supported by the International Telecommunication Development Company ITDC 17 Phase out of 121 5 MHz satellite alerting service EditBecause of the extremely high numbers of false alerts on the 121 500 MHz frequency over 98 of all COSPAS SARSAT alerts the IMO eventually requested for a termination of COSPAS SARSAT processing of 121 5 MHz signals The ICAO Council also agreed to this phase out request and the COSPAS SARSAT Council decided that future satellites would no longer carry the 121 5 MHz search and rescue repeater SARR 18 Since 1 February 2009 only 406 MHz beacons are detected by the international Cospas Sarsat SAR satellite system This affects all maritime beacons EPIRBs all aviation beacons ELTs and all personal beacons PLBs In other words Cospas Sarsat has ceased satellite detection and processing of 121 5 243 MHz beacons These older beacons are now only detectable by ground based receivers and aircraft EPIRBs that do not transmit on 406 MHz are banned on boats in the United States 19 and in many other jurisdictions More information about the switch to 406 MHz is available on Cospas Sarsat s 121 5 243 Phase Out page Despite the switch to 406 MHz pilots and ground stations are encouraged to continue to monitor for transmissions on the emergency frequencies as most 406 MHz beacons are required to be equipped with 121 5 homers Furthermore the 121 5 MHz frequency continues remains the official global VHF aircraft voice distress frequency FAA transition status Edit In a Safety Recommendation released September 2007 the U S National Transportation Safety Board once again recommended that the U S FAA require all aircraft have 406 MHz ELTs 20 They first recommended this back in 2000 and after vigorous opposition by AOPA the FAA declined to do so Citing two recent accidents one with a 121 5 MHz ELT and one with a 406 MHz ELT the NTSB concludes that switching all ELTs to 406 MHz is a necessary goal to work towards 21 better source needed NASA has conducted crash tests with small airplanes to investigate how ELTs perform 22 23 24 Emergency Locator Transmitters Edit ELT about to be installed onto an airplane source source The radiotelephony locator beacon sound made by ELTs and some EPIRBs Emergency Locator Transmitters ELTs are fairly expensive aviation use Average cost is 1500 3000 25 locator beacons In commercial aircraft a cockpit voice recorder or flight data recorder must contain an underwater locator beacon In the US ELTs are required to be permanently installed in most general aviation aircraft depending upon the type or location of operation The specifications for the design of ELTs are published by the RTCA and in the specification the alarm signal is defined as an AM signal A3X and or N0N emissions containing a swept tone ranging from 1600 Hz to 300 Hz downwards with 2 4 sweeps per second 26 27 When activated 406 MHz units transmit a 0 5 second 5 watt digital burst every 50 seconds varying within a span of 2 5 seconds somewhat randomly so as to avoid multiple ELTs always having their beacons synchronized 28 As per 14 CFR 91 207 a 1 ELTs built according to TSO C91 Archived 2008 07 04 at the Wayback Machine of the type described below as Traditional ELT unregistered have not been permitted for new installations since June 21 1995 the replacing standard was TSO C91a Furthermore TSO C91 91a ELTs are being replaced supplemented by the TSO C126 406 MHz 29 ELT a far superior unit 30 ELTs are unique among distress radiobeacons in that they have impact monitors and are activated by g force Although monitoring of 121 5 and 243 MHz Class B distress signals by satellite ceased in February 2009 the FAA has not mandated an upgrade of older ELT units to 406 MHz in United States aircraft 31 Transport Canada has put forward a proposed regulatory requirement that requires upgrade to Canadian registered aircraft to either a 406 MHz ELT or an alternate means system however elected officials have overruled the recommendation of Transport Canada for the regulation and have asked for a looser regulation to be drafted by Transport Canada 32 33 Recent information indicates Transport Canada may permit private general aviation flight with only an existing 121 5 MHz ELT if there is a placard visible to all passengers stating to the effect that the aircraft does not comply with international recommendations for the carriage of the 406 MHz emergency alerting device and is not detectable by satellites in the event of a crash 34 In the case of 121 5 MHz beacons the frequency is known in aviation as the VHF Guard emergency frequency and all U S civilian pilots private and commercial are required by FAA policy to monitor this frequency when it is possible to do so The frequency can be used by Automatic Direction Finder ADF radionavigation equipment which is being phased out in favor of VOR and GPS but is still found on many aircraft citation needed clarification needed ELTs are relatively large and would fit in a cube about 30 cm 12 in on a side and weigh 2 to 5 kg 4 4 to 11 0 lb ELTs were first mandated in 1973 by FAA technical standard order TSO C91 The original TSO C91 and updated TSO C91A 35 were officially deprecated as of February 2 2009 when reception of the 121 5 MHz signal was deactivated on all of the SAR satellite in favor of the C126 ELT models with their 406 MHz Cospas Sarsat beacons However the 121 5 MHz signal is still used for close in direction finding of a downed aircraft ELT activation Edit Automatic ELTs have impact monitors activated by g force ELT sub classification Edit Emergency locator transmitters ELTs for aircraft may be classed as follows 36 A automatically ejected AD automatic deployable F Fixed AF automatic fixed AP automatic portable W water activated S survivalWithin these classes an ELT may be either a digital 406 MHz beacon or an analog beacon see below Obsolete ELTs Edit Any ELT that is not a 406 MHz ELT with a Hex Code became obsolete February 1 2009 According to the U S Federal Aviation Administration ground testing of A B and S type ELTs is to be done within the first 5 minutes of each hour Testing is restricted to three audio sweeps 37 Type I and II devices those transmitting at 406 MHz have a self test function and must not be activated except in an actual emergency Timeline of ELT development Edit Automatic SOS radios were developed as early as the 1930s 38 The United States Air Force institutes development of a Crash Locator Beacon and a Crash Locator Bearing Recorder in the early 1950s 39 In the UK by 1959 the first automatic beacon for liferafts had been produced by Ultra Electronics and at the same time Burndept produced the TALBE Talk and Listen Beacon Equipment 1 VHF and SARBE Search And Rescue Beacon Equipment UHF range of beacons which were used by the Fleet Air Arm and later Royal Air Force Later SARBE beacons included a radio for voice communication by the survivor with the rescuing personnel 40 Jan 9 1964 FAA Advisory Circular 170 4 investigated ELTs Mar 17 1969 FAA Advisory Circular 91 19 advised pilots to install ELTs A Saturday Evening Post article covered the death of 16 year old Carla Corbus who survived though badly injured along with her mother for 54 days after the plane her step dad was flying crashed in the Trinity Alps of California in March 1967 He was lost and died in the woods looking for rescue The winter 1969 search for the Hawthorne Nevada Airlines Flight 708 Gamblers Special DC 3 that crashed on February 18 1969 in the Sierra Nevada Mountains Five aircraft crashed and five searchers were killed while trying to find Flight 708 41 Carriage requirements for emergency locator beacons on most US non jet powered fixed wing civil aircraft became law on December 29 1970 with the signing of Senate bill S 2193 The Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 Public Law 91 596 42 43 as a last minute rider to the Occupational Safety and Health Act Senator Peter Dominick R Colorado added the unrelated beacon language as a rider to the bill which became section 31 of the law Earlier in the session he tried to add the requirements as an amendment to House bill H R 14465 the Airport and Airways Development Act of 1969 but was unsuccessful 44 It required most general aviation aircraft to install ELTs by Dec 30 1973 and it preempted all the state ELT laws The federal ELT law left the matter of alerting vague although the initial idea was alerting by over flying aircraft which could receive an ELT s 75 milliwatt signal from 50 nautical miles away The law set the compliance dates as one year after passage for newly manufactured or imported aircraft December 30 1971 and three years for existing aircraft December 30 1973 In response to the law the Federal Aviation Administration FAA published on March 13 1971 Notice of Proposed Rule Making NPRM 71 7 with the proposed amendments to the Federal Aviation Regulations FAR 45 After public comment the final rules were published in the Federal Register on September 21 1971 46 The disappearance of U S Congressmen Hale Boggs and Nick Begich in a general aviation aircraft on October 16 1972 sparked the then largest ever search and rescue effort which proved fruitless This high profile event further hastened the mandating of ELTs aboard aircraft 47 The RTCA published DO 145 DO 146 and DO 147 which the FAA then adopted the three DO documents as Technical Standard Order TSO C91 After problems with the C 91 ELTs The FAA responded to the defective early ELTs by outlawing the installation of C 91 ELTs and certifying C91a ELTs with an improved gravity switch improved crash and fire worthy casing and batteries that work in colder temperatures March 16 1973 AC 20 85 Emergency Locator Transmitters and Receivers Dec 23 1992 TSO C126 406 MHz Emergency Locator Transmitter ELT 48 defines the 406 MHz ELTEmergency Position Indicating Radio Beacon EditEmergency Position Indicating Radio Beacons EPIRBs are a development of the ELT designed specifically for use on boats and ships and basic models tend to be less expensive than ELTs average cost is 800 25 As such instead of using an impact sensor to activate the beacon they typically use a water sensing device or a submerged sensing device that activates and releases a floating beacon after it has been submerged in between 1 and 4 meters of water In addition to the 406 MHz signal mandated by C S T 001 the IMO and ICAO require an auxiliary 121 5 MHz at another frequency in order to support the large installed base of 121 5 MHz direction finding equipment The RTCM Radio Technical Commission for Maritime Services maintains specifications specific to EPIRB devices The alarm signal is defined as an AM signal A3X and or N0N emissions containing a swept tone ranging from 1600 Hz to 300 Hz either upwards or downwards with 2 4 sweeps per second 26 27 EPIRBs with an AIS transmitter are allocated MMSI numbers in the range 974yyzzzz An EPIRB alerts the Coast Guard of a vessels emergency with the GPS coordinates taking the Search out of Search and Rescue EPIRB sub classification Edit Emergency position indicating radio beacons EPIRBs are sub classified as follows 16 Recognized categories Category I 406 121 5 MHz Float free automatically activated EPIRB Detectable by satellite anywhere in the world Recognized by GMDSS Category II 406 121 5 MHz Similar to Category I except is manually activated Some models are also water activated Obsolete classes Class A 121 5 243 MHz Float free automatically activating Due to limited signal coverage and possible lengthy delays in signal recognition the U S Coast Guard no longer recommends use of this type These devices have been phased out by the U S Federal Communications Commission FCC and are no longer recognized Class B 121 5 243 MHz Manually activated version of Class A These devices have been phased out by the FCC and are no longer recognized Class S 121 5 243 MHz Similar to Class B except it floats or is an integral part of a survival craft lifeboat or survival suit These devices have been phased out by the FCC and are no longer recognized Their use is no longer recommended by the U S Coast Guard Class C Marine VHF ch15 16 Manually activated these beacons operate on maritime channels only and therefore are not detectable by satellite or normal aircraft Designed for small crafts operating close to shore this type was only recognized in the United States Use of these units was phased out in 1999 These devices have been phased out by the FCC and are no longer recognized Inmarsat E This entered service in 1997 and service ended 1 December 2006 all former users have switched to Category I or II 406 MHz EPIRBs These beacons were float free automatically activated EPIRBs operated on 1646 MHz and were detectable by the Inmarsat geostationary satellite system and were recognized by GMDSS but not by the United States In September 2004 Inmarsat announced that it was terminating its Inmarsat E EPIRB service as of December 2006 due to a lack of interest in the maritime community 49 Furthermore the U S Coast Guard recommend that no EPIRB of any type manufactured before 1989 be used EPIRBs are a component of the Global Maritime Distress and Safety System GMDSS Most commercial off shore working vessels with passengers are required to carry a self deploying EPIRB while most in shore and fresh water craft are not As part of the United States efforts to prepare beacon users for the end of 121 5 MHz frequency processing by satellites the FCC has prohibited the use of 121 5 MHz EPIRBs as of January 1 2007 47 CFR 80 1051 See NOAA s statement on the 121 5 243 phaseout Archived 2018 02 09 at the Wayback Machine EPIRB activation Edit Automatic EPIRBs are water activated Some EPIRBs also deploy this means that they physically depart from their mounting bracket on the exterior of the vessel usually by going into the water For a marine EPIRB to begin transmitting a signal or activate it first needs to come out of its bracket or deploy Deployment can happen either manually where someone must physically remove it from its bracket or automatically where water pressure will cause a hydrostatic release unit to separate the EPIRB from its bracket If it does not come out of the bracket it will not activate There is a magnet in the bracket which operates a reed safety switch in the EPIRB This prevents accidental activation if the unit gets wet from rain or shipped seas Once deployed EPIRBs can be activated depending on the circumstances either manually crewman flicks a switch or automatically when water contacts the unit s sea switch All modern EPIRBs provide both methods of activation and deployment and thus are labelled Manual and Automatic Deployment and Activation Automatic hydrostatic release unit Edit A hydrostatic release unit is designed to deploy automatically when submerged to a prescribed depth the pressure of the water activates a mechanism which releases the EPIRB EPIRB hydrostatic release mechanismSubmarine Emergency Positioning Indicating Radio Beacon EditA Submarine Emergency Positioning Indicating Radio Beacon SEPIRB is an EPIRB that is approved for use on submarines Two are carried on board and can be fired from the submerged signal ejectors 50 Ship Security Alert System EditMain article Ship Security Alert System A Ship Security Alert System SSAS is a special variety of an EPIRB designed to alert the ship s owner s of a possible piracy or terrorist attack They thus have several distinguishing operational differences They are manually activated by hidden buttons or switches much like the alarms bank tellers use They are prohibited from emitting a homing signal on 121 5 MHz so as to make transmissions more covert The COSPAS SARSAT system sends the distress message to the vessel s country of origin regardless of the location of the vessel As with EPIRBs the RTCM maintains specifications for SSAS devices Personal Locator Beacon Edit Personal Locator Beacon now include GPS White and IR Strobe Lights and Return Link Service Personal Locator Beacons PLBs are designed for use by individuals who are hiking kayaking or conducting other activities on land or water where they are not in or associated with an aircraft or vessel that is equipped with its own ELT or EPIRB As with EPIRBs the RTCM maintains specifications for PLB devices PLBs vary in size from cigarette packet to paperback book and weigh 200 g to 1 kg 1 2 to 21 5 lb They can be purchased from marine suppliers aircraft refitters and in Australia and the United States hiking supply stores The units have a useful life of 10 years operate across a range of conditions 40 to 40 C 40 to 104 F and transmit for 24 to 48 hours 51 source source The radiotelephony locator beacon sound made by PLBs and some EPIRBs The alarm signal is defined as an AM signal A3X and or N0N emissions containing a swept tone ranging from 300 Hz to 1600 Hz upwards with 2 4 sweeps per second PLBs shall sweep upward 26 27 PLB alerts are passed to State and Local agencies 8 They must be registered to a specific person with NOAA in the U S PLB equipment is required to include 406 MHz plus a homing frequency on 121 5 MHz 52 As of 2017 PLBs must have an internal GPS 53 PLB sub classification Edit There are two kinds of personal locator beacon PLB PLB with GPS data internally or externally provided PLB with no GPS dataAll PLBs transmit in digital mode on 406 MHz There are AIS PLBs that transmit on VHF 70 Personal locator beacons operating on 406 MHz must be registered PLBs should not be used in cases where normal emergency response such as 9 1 1 exists Obsolete PLBs Edit U S Military forces at one time used 121 5 243 0 MHz beacons such as the PRC 106 which had a built in VHF radio The military is replacing them with modern 406 MHz PLBs citation needed Beacon content EditThe most important aspect of a beacon in classification is the mode of transmission There are two valid transmission modes digital and analog Where digital usually has a longer range analog is more reliable Analog beacons are useful to search parties and SAR aircraft though they are no longer monitored by satellite Analog 121 500 MHz homing signal Edit source source The radiotelephony locator beacon sound made by ELTs and some EPIRBs All ELTs all PLBs and most EPIRBs are required to have a low power homing signal that is identical to the original 121 500 MHz VHF beacon signal However due to the extremely large number of false alarms that the old beacons generated the transmit power was greatly reduced and because the VHF transmitter typically uses the same antenna as the UHF beacon the radiated signal is further reduced by the inherent inefficiencies of transmitting with an antenna not tuned to the transmitted signal Digital 406 MHz beacons Edit 406 MHz UHF beacons transmit bursts of digital information to orbiting satellites and may also contain a low power integrated analog 121 500 MHz homing beacon They can be uniquely identified via GEOSAR Advanced beacons encode a GPS or GLONASS position into the signal All beacons are located by Doppler triangulation to confirm the location The digital data identifies the registered user A phone call by authorities to the registered phone number often eliminates false alarms false alarms are the typical case If there is a problem the beacon location data guides search and rescue efforts No beacon is ignored Anonymous beacons are confirmed by two Doppler tracks before beginning beacon location efforts The distress message transmitted by a 406 beacon contains the information such as Which country the beacon originates from A unique 15 digit hexadecimal beacon identification code a 15 hex ID The encoded identification of the vessel or aircraft in distress either as an MMSI value or as in the case of an ELT either the aircraft s registration or its ICAO 24 bit address from its Mode S transponder When equipped a GPS position Whether or not the beacon contains a 121 5 MHz homing transmitter The digital distress message generated by the beacon varies according to the above factors and is encoded in 30 hexadecimal characters The unique 15 character digital identity the 15 hex ID is hard coded in the firmware of the beacon The 406 025 MHz carrier signal is modulated plus or minus 1 1 radians with the data encoded using Manchester encoding which ensures a net zero phase shift aiding Doppler location 54 406 MHz beacon facts and transmission schedule Edit 406 MHz beacons transmit for a quarter of a second immediately when turned on and then transmit a digital burst once every 50 seconds thereafter Both GEOSAR and LEOSAR satellites monitor these signals The repetition period shall not be so stable that any two transmitters appear to be synchronized closer than a few seconds over a 5 minute period The intent is that no two beacons will have all of their bursts coincident The period shall be randomised around a mean value of 50 seconds so that time intervals between transmission are randomly distributed on the interval 47 5 to 52 5 seconds specification for first generation beacons 55 Preliminary specification for second generation beacons From beacon activation a total of 6 initial transmissions shall be made separated by fixed 5s 0 1s intervals The first transmission shall commence within 3 seconds of beacon activation Transmissions shall then occur at nominally 30 second intervals until 30 1 minutes after beacon activation The repetition period between the start of two successive transmissions shall be randomised around the stated nominal value so that intervals between successive transmissions are randomly distributed over 5 seconds Subsequent transmissions TBD 56 406 MHz beacons will be the only beacons compatible with the MEOSAR DASS system 57 406 MHz beacons must be registered see below Hex codes Edit Example hex codes look like the following 90127B92922BC022FF103504422535 58 A bit telling whether the message is short 15 hex digits or long 30 hex digits format A country code which lets the worldwide COSPAS SARSAT central authority identify the national authority responsible for the beacon Embedded 15 Hex ID or 15 hex transmitted distress message for example 2024F72524FFBFF The hex ID is printed or stamped on the outside of the beacon and is hard coded into its firmware The 15 hex ID can only be reprogrammed by certified distress radiobeacon technicians The national authority uses this number to look up phone numbers and other contact information for the beacon This is crucial to handle the large number of false alarms generated by beacons A location protocol number and type of location protocol EPIRB or MMSI as well as all the data fields of that location protocol If the beacon is equipped with GPS or GLONASS a rough rounded latitude and longitude giving the beacon s current position In some aircraft beacons this data is taken from the aircraft s navigation system When a beacon is sold to another country the purchaser is responsible for having the beacon reprogrammed with a new country code and to register it with their nation s beacon registry and the seller is responsible to de register the deprecated beacon ID with their national beacon registry One can use the beacon decoder web page 59 at Cospas Sarsat to extract the 15 hex ID from the 30 hex distress message Frequencies EditDistress beacons transmit distress signals on the following key frequencies the frequency used distinguishes the capabilities of the beacon A recognized beacon can operate on one of the three currently Cospas Sarsat satellite compatible frequencies In the past other frequencies were also used as a part of the search and rescue system Cospas Sarsat satellite compatible beacon frequencies Edit see above for transmission schedule 406 MHz UHF carrier signal at 406 025 406 076 MHz 0 005 MHz 60 Channel frequency status 61 62 Ch 1 A 406 022 MHz reference Ch 2 B 406 025 MHz in use today Ch 3 C 406 028 MHz in use today Ch 4 D 406 031 MHz Ch 5 E 406 034 MHz Ch 6 F 406 037 MHz in use today Ch 7 G 406 040 MHz in use today Ch 8 H 406 043 MHz Ch 9 I 406 046 MHz Ch 10 J 406 049 MHz operational at a future date Ch 11 K 406 052 MHz operational at a future date Ch 12 L 406 055 MHz Ch 13 M 406 058 MHz Ch 14 N 406 061 MHz operational at a future date Ch 15 O 406 064 MHz operational at a future date Ch 16 P 406 067 MHz Ch 17 Q 406 070 MHz Ch 18 R 406 073 MHz operational at a future date Ch 19 S 406 076 MHz operational at a future date Cospas Sarsat unsupported beacon frequencies Edit Marine VHF radio channels 15 16 these channels are used only on the obsolete Class C EPIRBs The obsolete Inmarsat E beacons transmitted to Inmarsat satellites on 1646 MHz UHF 121 5 MHz VHF 6 kHz frequency band protected to 50 kHz 63 Satellite detection ceased on 1 February 2009 64 but this frequency is still used for short range location during a search and rescue operation 243 0 MHz UHF 12 kHz frequency band protected to 100 kHz 63 65 prior to 1 February 2009 COSPAS SARSAT Compatible License and registration requirements EditLicense Edit In North America and Australasia and most jurisdictions in Europe no special license is required to operate an EPIRB In some countries for example the Netherlands 66 a marine radio operators license is required The following paragraphs define other requirements relating to EPIRBs ELTs and PLBs Registration Edit All distress alerting beacons operating on 406 MHz should be registered all vessels and aircraft operating under International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea SOLAS and International Civil Aviation Organization ICAO regulations must register their beacons Some national administrations including the United States Canada Australia and the UK also require registration of 406 MHz beacons There is no charge to register 406 MHz beacons The U S Coast Guard warns that a user s life may be saved as a result of registered emergency information because it can respond more quickly to signals from registered beacons 16 Unless the national registry authority advises otherwise personal information contained in a beacon is used exclusively for SAR distress alert resolution purposes The Cospas Sarsat Handbook of Beacon Regulations provides the status of 406 MHz beacon regulations in specific countries and extracts of some international regulations pertaining to 406 MHz beacons The following list shows the agencies accepting 406 beacon registrations by country United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Canada Canadian Beacon Registry CFB Trenton for civil beacons CMCC for military beacons Australia Australian Maritime Safety Authority AMSA United Kingdom United Kingdom Maritime and Coastguard Agency MCA Greece Ministry of Merchant Marine and Hellenic Civil Aviation Authority France CNES Italy Stazione Satellitare Italiana Cospas Sarsat Netherlands Agentschap Telecom NL Denmark Danish Maritime Authority New Zealand New Zealand Rescue Coordination Centre 2 Archived 2016 12 02 at the Wayback Machine Switzerland Federal Office for Civil Aviation 3 Archived 2018 07 12 at the Wayback Machine International Cospas Sarsat International 406 MHz Beacon Registration Database IBRD Specifications EditSeveral regulations and technical specifications govern emergency locator beacons FAA AC 20 85 Emergency Locator Transmitters and Receivers March 16 1973 AC 170 4 Jan 9 1964 investigated ELTs AC 91 19 mar 17 1969 advised pilots to install ELTs TSO C91 TSO C91a 67 TSO C126 406 MHz Emergency Locator Transmitter ELT TSO C126a 406 MHz Emergency Locator Transmitter ELT TSO C126b 406 MHz Emergency Locator Transmitter ELT Radio Technical Commission for Aeronautics DO 127 DO 145 DO 146 DO 147 Radio Technical Commission for Maritime Services Special Committee SC 110 on Emergency Beacons EPIRBs and PLBs Special Committee SC 119 on Maritime Survivor Locator Devices Special Committee SC 121 on Automatic Identification Systems AIS and digital Messaging Special Committee SC 128 on Satellite Emergency Notification Device SEND Cospas Sarsat C S A 001 Cospas Sarsat Data Distribution Plan C S A 002 Cospas Sarsat Mission Control Centres Standard Interface Description C S T 001 Specification for COSPAS SARSAT 406 MHz Distress Beacons 68 C S T 007 COSPAS SARSAT 406 MHz Distress Beacons Type Approval Standard C S T 015 Specification and Type Approval Standard for 406 MHz Ship Security Alert Beacons C S G 003 Introduction to the Cospas Sarsat System C S G 004 Cospas Sarsat Glossary C S G 005 Guidelines on 406 MHz Beacon Coding Registration and Type Approval 69 C S S 007 Handbook of Beacon Regulations IMO ITU Recommendation ITU R M 633 IMO s technical requirements for the 406 MHz EPIRB signal Report ITU R M 2285 0 Maritime survivor locating systems and devices man overboard systems An overview of systems and their mode of operation 70 ICAO IEC IEC 61097 2 Global maritime distress and safety system GMDSS Part 2 COSPASSARSAT EPIRB Satellite emergency position indicating radio beacon operating on 406 MHz Operational and performance requirements methods of testing and required test resultsEPIRB hydrostatic release device requirements Edit Safety of Life a Sea Convention SOLAS 74 95 ISO ISO 15734 U S Federal Regulations CFR title 46 Vol 6 Section 160 062 U S Coast Guard Regulations USCG 160 162 71 Corrosion resistance test Temperature tests Submergence and manual release test Strength tests Technical tests on the membrane Performance testAlternative technologies EditThere are also other personal devices in the marketplace which do not meet the standard for 406 MHz devices Maritime Survivor Locator Device Edit A Maritime Survivor Locator Device MSLD is a man overboard locator beacon In the U S rules were established in 2016 in 47 C F R Part 95MOB devices with DSC or AIS are allocated MMSI numbers in the range 972yyzzzz A MSLD may transmit on 121 500 MHz or one of these 156 525 MHz 156 750 MHz 156 800 MHz 156 850 MHz 161 975 MHz 162 025 MHz bold are Canadian required frequencies Although sometimes defined in the same standards as the COSPAS SARSAT beacons MSLDs can not be detected by that satellite network and are instead intended only for short range Direction finding equipment mounted on the vessel on which the survivor was traveling AIS SART Edit Main article AIS SART These devices are distinct from traditional SAR radar transponders SART as they transmit AIS messages containing accurate GPS position information and include a GPS receiver and a transmitter on VHF AIS channels so they show up on ship AIS receivers They are lightweight and can be used to equip inflatable liferafts AIS SART devices are allocated MMSI numbers in the range 970YYxxxx SEND Satellite Emergency Notification Device Edit Main article Satellite emergency notification device These devices are commonly referred to as SEND Satellite Emergency Notification Device and examples include SPOT and inReach APRS Edit Main article Automatic Packet Reporting System APRS is used by amateur radio operators to track positions and send short messages Most APRS packets contain a GPS latitude and longitude so they can be used for both normal and emergency tracking They also are routed to the Internet where they are archived for some period of time and viewable by others There are several emergency packet types that can indicate distress Since it is part of the amateur radio service it costs nothing to transmit on and uses the extensive network however one must be a licensed amateur radio operator There is also no guarantee that an APRS distress packet report would be seen or handled by emergency responders It would have to be seen by an amateur radio operator and forwarded on See also EditPortals Transport Aviation Emergency locator beacon Radio frequency beacon used to locate airplanes vessels and persons in distress 1986 British International Helicopters Chinook crash 1986 aviation disaster in the Shetland Islands 1996 New Hampshire Learjet crash 1996 business jet disappearance near Dorchester New Hampshire United States Acronyms and abbreviations in avionics Aircraft emergency frequency Emergency aeronautical frequency Search and rescue transponder transponder intended for emergency use at seaPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Automatic identification system Automatic tracking system that uses transceivers on ships AIS SART Radio transmitter which sends a location signal Avalanche transceiver Emergency locator rescue radio beacon RECCO Rescue technology Civil Air Patrol Civilian auxiliary of the United States Air Force Electric beacon Radio transmitter to identify a location for navigation aidPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets ENOS Rescue System Electronic rescue and locating system for use by divers at sea Global Maritime Distress and Safety System Worldwide emergency communication system for ships at sea Satellite emergency notification device Search and rescue transponder transponder intended for emergency use at seaPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Survival radio Small radios carried to facilitate rescue in an emergency Varig Flight 254 1989 aviation accident GPS aircraft trackingNotes Edit Community Emergency Response Team Participant Handbook ITU Radio Regulations Section IV Radio Stations and Systems Article 1 93 definition emergency position indicating radiobeacon station a b O Connors Chris Cospas Sarsat System Overview PDF SAR statistics Archived from the original on 2012 08 06 Retrieved 9 Oct 2012 Rescue Stories Archived from the original on 15 September 2012 Retrieved 9 October 2012 Milovanovich C 7 May 2009 Inquest into the death of David Iredale PDF Lawlink Archived from the original PDF on 22 March 2011 Retrieved 20 February 2010 What happens when I activate my beacon Archived from the original on February 19 2014 a b Civil Air Patrol Maryland Wing Conference Locating 121 5 amp 406 MHz Emergency Beacons PDF SARSAT U S Rescues MEOSAR Medium Earth Orbiting Search amp Rescue PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2017 04 26 Retrieved 2018 02 08 See COSPAS SARSAT document A 001 2005 Friess Steve September 11 2007 Aircraft beacon has become utterly outmoded FAA says The New York Times SAR Points of Contact Archived from the original on 2018 02 09 Retrieved 2018 02 08 a b USMCC 406 MHz Alert and Support Messages for the LEOSAR GEOSAR MEOSAR LGM System PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2017 09 29 Retrieved 2018 02 08 U S Coast Guard Rescue Coordination Centers RCCs a b c Emergency Position Indicating Radiobeacon EPIRB www navcen uscg gov a b c d e f g h i j Participants Report to the Maritime Safety Committee PDF Use of 121 5 243 MHz EPIRBs Banned BoatUS Magazine March 2007 Safety recommendation A 07 51 National Transportation Safety Board 4 September 2007 NTSB to FAA Require 406 MHz ELTs Doug Ritter s Equipped org Blog McDonald Samuel 2015 07 29 Second Crash Test Harvests Valuable Data to Improve Emergency Response NASA Kauh Elaine 2015 08 26 NASA Completes ELT Crash Tests AVweb NASA crash video on YouTube a b Comparison of 406 MHz and 121 5 MHz Distress Beacons PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2005 09 05 Retrieved 2018 02 06 a b c EBC 502HM Specifications PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2016 06 14 a b c RSS 287 Emergency Position Indicating Radio Beacons EPIRB Emergency Locator Transmitters ELT Personal Locator Beacons PLB and Maritime Survivor Locator Devices MSLD August 2001 C S Emergency Beacons PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2017 04 26 Retrieved 2018 02 08 Historical Technical Standard Order www airweb faa gov Archived from the original on 2007 12 05 Retrieved 2007 09 06 The ELT July 19 2011 Archived from the original on July 19 2011 Emergency Locator Transmitters rgl faa gov Regulations Amending the Canadian Aviation Regulations Parts I and VI ELT Archived 2015 03 25 at the Wayback Machine Canada Gazette Canada Backs Off 406 ELTs Archived from the original on 2009 05 15 Retrieved 2009 11 20 Hunt Adam July 27 2009 COPA Flight 8 Ottawa July 2009 Update on 4006 MHz ELTs TSO C91a Emergency Locator Transmitter ELT Equipment PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2008 07 04 Retrieved 2007 09 06 RSS 187 Emergency Position Indicating Radio Beacons Emergency Locator Transmitters Personal Locator Beacons and Maritime Survivor Locator Devices PDF permanent dead link Archived copy Archived from the original on 2009 10 12 Retrieved 2009 09 22 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Another Automatic SOS Flight 15 September 1938 p241 Down at Sea PDF Flying Safety Vol 7 no 5 Inspector General Department of the Air Force May 1951 p 4 Retrieved 11 July 2021 Flight magazine 18 September 1959 Family gets answers about mysterious plane crash in 1969 Congressional Record Volume 116 December 30 1970 pages 44 064 44 065 Winston Donald C September 20 1971 Civil Aviation Bills Facing Uncertain Fate in Congress Aviation Week and Space Technology Vol 95 no 12 pp 54 55 Retrieved October 10 2017 Cong Rec Vol 116 May 12 1970 pages 15 134 15 136 Federal Register Volume 36 Number 50 March 13 1971 pages 4 878 4 881 FR 36 183 September 21 1971 pages 18 716 18 725 Emergency Locator Transmitters ELTs Archived from the original on 2019 05 06 Retrieved 2018 02 08 TSO C126 406 MHz Emergency Locator Transmitter ELT PDF Inmarsat will withdraw epirb service in 2006 and promises new safety service on next generation I 4 satellites Archived from the original on December 9 2006 Canadian Coast Guard 2017 Notice 34 Information Concerning Submarines Specification for COSPAS SARSAT 406 MHz Distress Beacons C S T 001 Issue 3 Revision 7 PDF cospas sarsat com May 20 2006 Archived from the original PDF on May 20 2006 RSS 287 Emergency Position Indicating Radio Beacons EPIRB Emergency Locator Transmitters ELT Personal Locator Beacons PLB and Maritime Survivor Locator Devices MSLD August 2001 2017 FCC Marine Communications Rule Changes PDF Albert Helfrick Principles of Avionics 5th Edition Avionics Communications 2009 ISBN 1885544278 p 287 SPECIFICATION FOR COSPAS SARSAT 406 MHz DISTRESS BEACONS C S T 001 Issue 3 Revision 15 PDF International Cospas Sarsat Programme October 2014 SPECIFICATION FOR SECOND GENERATION COSPAS SARSAT 406 MHz DISTRESS BEACONS C S T 018 Preliminary Issue A PDF International Cospas Sarsat Programme October 2014 NASA Search and Rescue Mission Office Distress Alerting Satellite System DASS Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Example of 406 MHz Beacon Coding beacon decoder webpage When one enters the transmitted i e GPS location included 15 hex into the decoder the unmodified 15 hex ID is printed at the bottom of the output of the Beacon Decoder page This method can be used to confirm that a beacon is encoding the correct 15 hex ID as printed on the side of the beacon into its distress messages URL updated 26 March 2021 https web archive org web 20060520033357 http www cospas sarsat com DocumentsRSeries r9oct28 pdf permanent dead link COSPAS SARSAT 406 MHz FREQUENCYMANAGEMENT PLAN C S T 012 Issue 1 Revision 10 PDF International Cospas Sarsat Programme October 2014 Handbook on Radio Frequency Spectrum Requirements for Civil Aviation including Statement of Approved ICAO Policies PDF Fifth ed ICAO 2009 Doc 9718 AN 957 a b RSS 187 Emergency Position Indicating Radio Beacons Emergency Locator Transmitters Personal Locator Beacons and Maritime Survivor Locator Devices PDF permanent dead link Sport Aviation 10 March 2009 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Missing or empty title help KANNAD 406 AS Archived from the original on 2007 10 09 Retrieved 2007 10 01 Agentschap Telecom EPIRB March 25 2013 Archived from the original on March 25 2013 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2008 07 04 Retrieved 2007 09 06 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link C S T 001 Specification for COSPAS SARSAT 406 MHz Distress Beacons PDF Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2018 02 08 Retrieved 2018 02 07 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Report ITU R M 2285 0 Maritime survivor locating systems and devices man overboard systems An overview of systems and their mode of operation PDF Life saving appliances including LSA code International Maritime Organization 2nd ed London 2010 ISBN 9789280115079 References EditCOSPAS SARSAT Document C S T 001 October 1999 FCC Part 80 and GMDSS MED 0735 2001 RTCM Standard for 406 MHz Satellite EPIRBsExternal links EditCospas Sarsat the International Satellite System For Search and Rescue ITU Maritime mobile Access and Retrieval System MARS NOAA SARSAT website NOAA notice of planned phasing out of 121 5 243 MHz beacons in 2009 Archived 2021 05 22 at the Wayback Machine ICAO IMO Working Paper 10 to 14 September 2007 Joint Working Group on Harmonization of Aeronautical and Maritime Search and Rescue Operation of a Hydrostatic Release Unit EEVblog 368 EPIRB Teardown Examination of the components of a 121 5 243Mhz Epirb YouTube 9 October 2012 Archived from the original on 2021 12 11 Rescue Coordination Centres RCCs and SAR Points of Contact SPOCs RCC Messages The History and Experience of the International COSPAS SARSAT Programme for Satellite Aided Search and Rescue Archived 2017 01 21 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Emergency position indicating radiobeacon amp oldid 1141048264, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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