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Immersion suits?

 
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clivesutton



Joined: 23 Jan 2013
Posts: 187
Location: KENILWORTH

PostPosted: Fri Jun 28, 2013 10:28 am    Post subject: Immersion suits? Reply with quote

Fellow Europa flyers,

Am planning a trip up to the Shetland Isles 6-14th July for which some of the transits (longest perhaps 30mins) are over water. Thinking about ditching and surviveability, can anyone recommend or advise on the hire or loan of immersion suits - as I'd rather not buy for this one trip. My first over water stretch is from Banff to Wick (departure Fishburn) and the second and subsequent is Wick to Kirkwall, Sumburgh and various other leg sections up to Baltasound airport on Unst - and back of course. Have new (and registered) PLB, and lifejackets. Also, if anyone knows, what might the additional weight of two immersions suits be?

All advice/comments/tips based upon experience, welcome.

Clive Sutton G-TAGR


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graeme bird



Joined: 15 Jul 2010
Posts: 434

PostPosted: Fri Jun 28, 2013 12:05 pm    Post subject: Re: Immersion suits? Reply with quote

I brought two crewsaver ones last year with the cross front zip waist to shoulder. The wife couldn't bear to have hers on, so that went back. Never tried mine except in the pool - I imagine it could be very warm if the sun was out, also would need some shoes that would cover the rubber feet ends. Since I brought them I read DJ's articles and wondered if a dinghy wouldn't have been a better investment. I shopped around and paid around £230 I think. He mentioned a cheaper fishing suit arrangement if I recal.

what size are you? I am 5ft 10 12.5 stone, mr medium.


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Graeme Bird
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Kit2 G-PATS - (kesterton) Mono Classic 912 warpdrive
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davidjoyce(at)doctors.org
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PostPosted: Fri Jun 28, 2013 2:52 pm    Post subject: Immersion suits? Reply with quote

Clive, I would certainly opt to borrow or hire a dinghy
rather than suits - you can then be comfortable flying.
The water temp around N of Scotland is currently in 10 to
12C region which is not cold enough to be incapacitating
if you get wet. It is all pretty remote up there and I
would fancy my chances quite a bit more with a dinghy,(in
which you could expect to survive 3 days or more) rather
than suits in which you might survive a couple of hours or
so, assuming the plane sank(which it almost certainly
won't) and assuming you were not picked up very quickly
(possible, but with PLB and the sense to give them your
GPS position on the way down, hopefully not too likely). I
would offer you mine but am clinging to the hope that I
might get the weather to try a bit of Dawn to Dusk action
one or other of the two weekends you plan to be away, and
if so I might well be passing overhead! Regards, David
Joyce, G- XSDJ

On Fri, 28 Jun 2013 11:28:30 -0700
"gtagr" <clive.maf(at)googlemail.com> wrote:
Quote:

<clive.maf(at)googlemail.com>

Fellow Europa flyers,

Am planning a trip up to the Shetland Isles 6-14th July
for which some of the transits (longest perhaps 30mins)
are over water. Thinking about ditching and
surviveability, can anyone recommend or advise on the
hire or loan of immersion suits - as I'd rather not buy
for this one trip. My first over water stretch is from
Banff to Wick (departure Fishburn) and the second and
subsequent is Wick to Kirkwall, Sumburgh and various
other leg sections up to Baltasound airport on Unst - and
back of course. Have new (and registered) PLB, and
lifejackets. Also, if anyone knows, what might the
additional weight of two immersions suits be?

All advice/comments/tips based upon experience, welcome.

Clive Sutton G-TAGR




Read this topic online here:

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kpeng



Joined: 01 Apr 2011
Posts: 18

PostPosted: Fri Jun 28, 2013 4:37 pm    Post subject: Immersion suits? Reply with quote

Hi Guys,
Clive. 10 years ago I toured in my own plane with several aviators a lot wiser than I to Majorca/ Ibiza /Espana . A great mentor to me at the time was Tony ( RESECT )Smyth. He took his prized Europa to South Africa just for fun Smile. We were dining one night and Tony gave us all a presentation of his experience of a sea ditching survival course he had done.....WELL we laughted our heads off as this was done in a swimming pool. He and his fellow pupils found it nigh on Impossible( and Tony had the great build ) to get into the wet slippery dingy LOL. I think that if you are not 30ish and super fit and trained to survive, don't think ( how old are you ? ) that if you have the gear you will live !!..... The risk is yours

Take care
Kevin

to get into the bright new dingy Smile

Sent from my iPad

On 28 Jun 2013, at 23:56, "David Joyce" <davidjoyce(at)doctors.org.uk> wrote:

Quote:



Clive, I would certainly opt to borrow or hire a dinghy rather than suits - you can then be comfortable flying. The water temp around N of Scotland is currently in 10 to 12C region which is not cold enough to be incapacitating if you get wet. It is all pretty remote up there and I would fancy my chances quite a bit more with a dinghy,(in which you could expect to survive 3 days or more) rather than suits in which you might survive a couple of hours or so, assuming the plane sank(which it almost certainly won't) and assuming you were not picked up very quickly (possible, but with PLB and the sense to give them your GPS position on the way down, hopefully not too likely). I would offer you mine but am clinging to the hope that I might get the weather to try a bit of Dawn to Dusk action one or other of the two weekends you plan to be away, and if so I might well be passing overhead! Regards, David Joyce, G- XSDJ

On Fri, 28 Jun 2013 11:28:30 -0700
"gtagr" <clive.maf(at)googlemail.com> wrote:
>
> Fellow Europa flyers,
> Am planning a trip up to the Shetland Isles 6-14th July for which some of the transits (longest perhaps 30mins) are over water. Thinking about ditching and surviveability, can anyone recommend or advise on the hire or loan of immersion suits - as I'd rather not buy for this one trip. My first over water stretch is from Banff to Wick (departure Fishburn) and the second and subsequent is Wick to Kirkwall, Sumburgh and various other leg sections up to Baltasound airport on Unst - and back of course. Have new (and registered) PLB, and lifejackets. Also, if anyone knows, what might the additional weight of two immersions suits be? All advice/comments/tips based upon experience, welcome. Clive Sutton G-TAGR
> Read this topic online here:
> http://forums.matronics.com/viewtopic.php?p=403573#403573
> Un/Subscription,
> Forums!
> Admin.






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clivesutton



Joined: 23 Jan 2013
Posts: 187
Location: KENILWORTH

PostPosted: Fri Jun 28, 2013 9:39 pm    Post subject: Re: Immersion suits? Reply with quote

All,

Thanks for the replies and views.

Ex work colleague Mark Albery (of recent Atlantic crossing fame) has kindly offered to lend me his 2-place dinghy, which in light of David's comments seems the better option, especially as its apparently just 5kg. My Europa has foam wings, I have sensible buoyancy aids, a PLB and will be taking as high a point-to-point overland route as possible. Mark advises that SEMS Aerosafe of Basildon hies out survival gear at sensible prices (e.g. £40/wk for a raft), see: https://www.aerosafe.co.uk/acatalog/HIRE.html

Clive, G-TAGR


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frans(at)privatepilots.nl
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PostPosted: Sat Jun 29, 2013 1:50 am    Post subject: Immersion suits? Reply with quote

On 06/29/2013 02:36 AM, Kevin Kedward wrote:

Quote:
He and his fellow pupils
found it nigh on Impossible( and Tony had the great build ) to get
into the wet slippery dingy LOL.

Yep, I heard that too. There is a test somewhere on the internet where
they have tested a lot of dingies and it seems that even in a swimming
pool the majority of the people fail to board it. Let alone when there
are waves, you are somewhat injured due to the ditching, the water is
freezing cold, and you are wearing shoes and other restricting clothes.
I have a dingy, this was one of the models tested, and it is a model
without ladder ("stairs"?), like all lighter weight models, and nearly
impossible to board. It also doesn't have an anchor (again, most smaller
dingies don't have it) and this simply means that it will be blown by
the wind faster than you can swim. So, if you let it go for just a
moment while trying to board it, it will take off and leaving you
exhausted, and distract and confuse the rescue team.

Guess what, in the recent north cape trip, with quite a few water
crossings, I left the dingy home. It saves 7 kilo's. And I didn't know
where to put it anyway, without risk of having it either flying through
the cockpit (the deceleration when ditching seems to be enormous) or
stowed it securely away making it hard to retrieve it when needed from a
possibly sinking or inverted airplane.

For sale: Dingy. Never used. 7 kilos. 4-6 persons. In new condition.

Frans


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graeme bird



Joined: 15 Jul 2010
Posts: 434

PostPosted: Sun Jun 30, 2013 6:49 am    Post subject: Re: Immersion suits? Reply with quote

I can understand the dinghy thingy for a c172 or PA28 but for a classic mono wouldn't it be better to sit in it and in this case wouldn't the unimersed dry suit be the best clothing?
In general there will always be a series of unfortunate events and mitigations are about reducing risk not removing. Sure you may be injured, there may be huge waves and high winds it might take 3 days to be found
And be dark; but there again it might be flat calm. Just because the mitigation doesn't remove all risks doesnt mean its not worth having. A suit will certainly help against sudden cold immersion' which I know from dinghys can make it hard to breathe and sap energy to climb into anything.
I think DJ discussed the dinghy blowing away in his article.


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Graeme Bird
kit4 (Wagstaff) TBD
Kit3 G-CLXU (Gregory) mono 914 xs Woodcomp
Kit2 G-PATS - (kesterton) Mono Classic 912 warpdrive
Kit 1 G-UMPY - Mono Classic/XS 912S, Woodcomp G(@)gdbmk.co.uk
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