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Date:         Thu, 7 Dec 2006 23:59:52 -0500
Reply-To:     "Dr.Chris" <gronski@GMAIL.COM>
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From:         "Dr.Chris" <gronski@GMAIL.COM>
Subject:      Re: OT-stranded in the wilderness with a westy what would you do ?
Comments: To: joel walker <jwalker17@earthlink.net>
In-Reply-To:  <014201c71a81$a62c6860$675b9904@gpa207joel>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed

Nowhere near cheap and it uses the old 121.5 band but the Breitling Emergency Mission is a wristwatch with an emergency locator:

http://www.breitling.com/en/models/professional/emergency_mission/

I bet Tom Hanks wishes he was wearing one when he was abord that FedEx plane

Chris

On 12/7/06, joel walker <jwalker17@earthlink.net> wrote: > > Are there any inexpensive devices that would send a gps fix to > > international > > emergency satalite > > the allow searches to home in on sone lost / stranded in the westy > > wilderness ? > > any sort of radio transmitter (ELT or EPIRB) > is gonna cost money. several hundreds of dollars. > even the ELT detector is like $140 (tells a pilot that someone nearby > has triggered > their emergency beacon). > > but ... > > there are some things that are cheap (less than $40) that might help. > > personal strobe lights. horribly brillantly bright little strobe > lights that can be seen by aircraft or anybody in direct line of sight > for about two miles. usually capable of lasting about 8 hours or more, > depending on the model and the batteries. > downsides are ... this thing is BRIGHT. you're NOT gonna want to stand > there holding it. > which brings up downside number two: battery life in cold weather. not > good. :( > and you have to carry spare batteries for it. > but if anybody is around, they're gonna notice it. even in the > daytime. > $15 to $40 each. standard household batteries. > > cyalume sticks. chemical light sticks. about $2 each. available online > or sometimes in wal-mart, in the hunting section. stores almost > indefinitely (fits nicely in the glove box). bend it in the middle > time the inner tube of chemicals cracks and the two chemicals mix, > shake it a bit, and you've got light. some colors (yellow) last 12 > hours. > downside ... isn't really bright, especially in daytime. but at night, > it shows up maybe 100 yards. if you tie a string around it and swing > it around your head in a circle, it attracts a LOT of attention. but > then, you've outside in the cold doing this. :( > $2 each. yellow, green, red. blue and white are available, but are > considerably dimmer than yellow or green. > > 12gauge flare guns for airplanes and boats. > downside, limited ammunition. > but it does attract attention, even in daytime. also fits nicely into > glove box. > attracts cops if/when searching your bus, and Officer Opie might not > know the difference between a flare gun and a SuperWhoopie CIA > Ass-Sassing Pistol, model 12 Guage. :) > about $40. > > me, i chose the cyalume sticks. they can also be used to entertain > children at campouts. > :) or used to work under your bus in the middle of the > dark-as-the-inside-of-a-cow nights. > > unca joel >


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