Life rafts

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Revision as of 04:55, 11 August 2008 by 204.14.248.131 (talk | contribs) (Givens Buoy Raft)
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With any new design there is a chance of having a problem. If your life is on the line, a life raft is a good backup plan. A simple life raft will get blown over in big waves and high winds. There are designs that work much better than the simple life raft.

Givens Buoy Raft

The Givens life raft uses water ballast so wind gusts and breaking waves don't tip it over. They have a testimonial of some guys that survived 48 hours in a hurricane, including passing through the eye. The water ballast also makes the raft drift much slower in the wind, so rescuers don't have to look so far. This design looks far safer than a simple open raft. There are life rafts for 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, or 25 people. An 8 person Givens raft costs $5,295 US.

Winslow Life Raft

The Winslow Life Rafts include models designed for open ocean. Prices are similar to Givens.

Free fall lifeboats

People can enter from the back and then they drop into the ocean. If things are looking bad for the main ship people can get into the lifeboat and wait to see if the problem can be fixed or if the ship is going to sink. Once in the lifeboat they can launch at any moment.

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In another video you can see the inside of the boat. Seats face backward.

Can see product info at norsafe.no.

Stuff to have in lifeboat

  • Sea Anchor - to keep bow pointed into waves
  • Water maker - if you can make water you last out a storm
  • Food
  • EPIRB - emergency radio beacon
  • GPS - to know where you are
  • Kite - so after things calm down some you can go where you want

Links