Bryan Cotton wrote:If you have a bad crash then your survival may depend on people knowing you are hurt and coming to get you. Time may be critical
See, this is interesting. The logic you're using to suggest an automatic ELT is
exactly the same logic I am using to suggest that a GPS system is more-important. Even the 406mhz ELT units still give an initial search area of something like 5 square miles, AFAIK... That's potentially several hours of searching at least - and I say this as someone who was lost near Donner Pass for a couple of days as a teenager, and watched search helicopters fly by and not see me!
A signal with GPS coordinates means people don't waste time searching for you, they
know where you are.
As a glider pilot, I'm often
flying in mountains and over unpopulated areas - I carry a SPOT tracker and love that people can see exactly where I've been and my last position (to within about 10 minutes)... Having had to punch the button a couple of times (to let people know I landed in a remote field), I am convinced of the value of folks being able to see exactly where I am on a map, and come get me. :D
BTW, one thing to note is that I'm not envisioning waiting for an accident and _then_ punching the PLB after the crash. With a GPS-based unit I would punch the button at the first sign of serious trouble and then trust that the unit was running while I flew the airplane "as far into the crash as possible" (to quote Bob Hoover). I look at a lot of fatal accident reports and note that they are often situations that developed over time. Rarely does it seem like the pilot is suddenly incapacitated or rendered unable to manipulate a control.
The real bottom line is that it appears the ELTs with built-in GPS are either expensive because of the limited market and no competition pressure; OR because of the regulatory hurdles and requirements... I wish there was more emphasis on making safety gear less-expensive and more-available! Perfect functionality is a nice goal; but erecting unnecessary barriers to the adoption of safety systems runs contrary to the goal of increased safety! This is why in the glider world we have voluntarily adopted "
FLARM" (
PowerFLARM here in the USA, thanks to FCC curmudgeons) as a standard for traffic awareness & anti-collision warnings - its way cheaper and easier to implement than TIS or ADS-B, has a lower power-draw, and can be iterated and improved without the shackles that something like a TSO (with strict specs and fully-defined functionality) imposes - but I digress... :roll:
--Noel