406ELT FAQ's and FACTS Part 2
FAQ#1 - I have customers come
to my booth at Sun-n-Fun and Oshkosh and complain to me that
their 406ELT battery from brand X only lasted 18 to 24 months
before replacement was required. How can this be when it was
advertised as a five year battery?
Answer - SARSAT requires the ELT’s to
transmit on 406Mhz frequency for a minimum of 24hours on 406Mhz
and 48 hours on
121.5Mhz. If
the battery doesn't have enough power to meet this minimum
requirement it is considered depleted.
In fact some manufacturers shut down the 406 transmitter after 24
hours of crash activation just to make sure the 121.5 transmitter
can make it to 48 hours. This "meets" certification but you
can see how fragile it is.
The owners’ problems come into affect when performing self
tests. Every test draws energy from the ELT battery and an
internal counter gives the owner a “failed” indication after the
predetermined number of tests. This is to ensure that the ELT can
still meet the specifications during an accident. Perform too
many tests and the ELT battery fails well before it’s time and if
the owner/operator loses track of the number of tests performed
or simply didn’t know of this short fall, they fall victim and
have to change their battery
prematurely.
How do you avoid buying products with these shortfalls?
Ask some questions that will reveal the battery potential:
Does your product require aircraft power for
the remote switch?
Does your product need batteries in the remote
switch?
How long does the 406Mhz transmitter run in an
emergency?
All of these symptoms tell you that the ELT battery cannot handle
the load by itself and needs assistance. This costs
you more money in mulitple replacement batteries.
Is there a product out there that does not have this
weakness? Absolutely yes.
If you want a 406ELT that won't break the bank and will give you
years of service without hidden weaknesses. Check out the Kannad
AF Compact.
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