VHF Marine Radio Channels, contd.
Channel 16 is designated as the national distress, safety and calling frequency. All vessels should monitor this channel while underway if their VHF radio is powered up. Calls to other vessels or land-based businesses and marinas are normally initiated on Channel 16 too. Recreational vessels may also use Channel 09 as well for hailing which will eliminate some congestion on Channel 16. However, it is important to take note that the United States Coast Guard does not monitor Channel 09 for distress calls. Any vessel in distress should use Channel 16 (which the Coast Guard does monitor). Channel 22 is the most common working channel for USCG in the event of an emergency and channels 1, 2 and 3 are weather broadcast channels.
The Basics of Marine Radio Use
To use your VHF, turn it on and pick a channel, set the squelch to the point where you don't hear any white noise, and begin talking. Things to remember when you are on the radio:
Calling for Help?
In emergency situations, there are certain procedures to follow to ensure prompt response to your need for help. There are three phrases that you might hear on a VHF radio, and they all relate to safety.
There is a "procedure" for sending out a distress call, but all you really need to know is to turn your VHF to Channel 16 and high power, key the mike by pressing the talk button, and say one of the three phrases three times, along with position and situation information. Here's a hypothetical mayday from the small fishing boat, Tambourine:
"Mayday, Mayday, Mayday. This is the Tambourine. Our position is 24:33' north and 74:56' west and we are sinking."
---- Try to speak slowly and clearly, and repeat this information three times. The essential information is Mayday, your position, and your emergency. If you have time, describe your boat and how many are aboard:
"We are a 23 foot Mako, green hull, white decks, with two adults and two children aboard."
---- If someone is injured, mention that. If you don't get an immediate response keep periodically sending out a Mayday broadcast as long as the radio will function, taking care to give your position with every transmission. If time permits, scan through the other channels and interrupt any radio traffic you hear with your Mayday broadcast. If you don't hear traffic, try transmitting on Coast Guard Channel 22A.
Digital Selective Calling (DSC) – What Could be Easier?
A VHF radio equipped with Digital Selective Calling, or DSC, has the equivalent of a "mayday button." All new fixed-mount VHF radios come with this one-button feature, which is usually labeled “DISTRESS.” When activated, it automatically broadcasts an encoded distress call that will be picked up by all nearby vessels equipped with DSC as well as US Coast Guards vessels and their shore stations. If the radio is interfaced with your GPS, it will also automatically broadcast the distressed vessel's position. To use DSC, you must obtain an MMSI (Maritime Mobile Service Identity) number. You may do so free of charge at this web address:http://www.boatus.com/mmsi . There are other great features of the DSC radio such as calling or hailing a fellow boater or a group of boaters that might be travelling or fishing together. You can do this as long as you know their DSC numbers, with the push of a button instead of having to hail by speaking into the microphone. For more on DSC radios, their features and installation, watch the BoatUS Foundation tutorial called, “Can you Hear Me?” http://www.boatus.com/foundation/dsc/player.html
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Going the Distance – EPIRBs and PLBs
If you are planning an offshore voyage, you need to know VHF radios and cellular telephones are limited in range, usually no more than 15 to 25 miles from shore. If you needed help or assistance in an emergency, a satellite Emergency Position Indicating Radio Beacon (EPIRB) or a Personal Locator Beacon (PLB) may be your only hope for rescue.
These beacons are part of a worldwide distress system and are designed to quickly and reliably alert rescue personnel, indicate an accurate position, and guide rescue units to the distress scene when all other communications fail. When activated, these units transmit a unique signal that incorporates your location and in some cases, specific information about your vessel. By law, these beacons must be registered so rescue personnel have reliable information. PLBs are also useful for hiking and other adventures so vessel information can be changed to reflect another activity with a different description.
Since these units can cost hundreds of dollars, the BoatUS Foundation for Boating Safety rents EPIRBs and PLBs at a mere fraction of the cost of ownership and makes them available to any boater seeking the peace-of-mind and emergency beacon provided. www.boatus.com/foundation/epirb