We were sailing around Baltimore harbor Sunday afternoon when the VHF started screaming. I looked on the screen and it was an automated distress call. I have had a DSC radio since 2014 and this was the first time I heard it.
The alarms went off at least 5 more times. There was a note on the screen that stated "acknowledgement" but I was not sure if that triggered the following alarms. Naturally there was a lot of chatter afterwards. The distress call did not have a location attached to it and a lot of the radio chatter indicated the same thing.
The Coast Guard was immediately involved. After about 10 minutes the vessel was located visually. A catamaran capsized just north of the bay bridge and from radio traffic all were rescued. I do not know the disposition of the cat but I assumed it was righted as I heard nothing on the news. A few observations:
From the radio traffic the CG could not determine the name of the vessel from the MMSI distress call. They requested the name of the boat from the first responding vessel. That was not comforting at all.
The MMSI did not have a location attached to it. The VHF either did not have a GPS source or it was not functioning. Not having a GPS attached took a lot of the functionality out of that call and caused a tremendous amount of confusion.
One other thing of note was the range of the digital distress call was far greater than a voice call. We were behind Port Covington. The distance was about 20 miles direct and we typically do not hear voice calls from that area. If the cat in distress was on its side that is even more impressive. I do not know if it was from a HH or not. Few HH radios have MMSI.
There was a lot of confusion and even some consternation in the radio responses as no one could figure out the immediate location of the vessel in distress. One woman even yelled and told them not to send out a "SOS" if there was no emergency.
The constant repetitive distress signals captured your radio and pulled it off 16 which was where the search and rescue chatter was. That would be a problem if you were immediately involved in the SAR.
There were several soft keys that appeared on the screen when the distress call came in. I first hit "quit" when I realized this was not in my area and could not assist. The calls kept coming. I then hit "accept" but the alarms continued each time the call was repeated.
After the vessel and its crew were assisted the calls eventually stopped. I hope no one here ever had to use it. I am curious about others knowledge and experiences with MMSI distress. All input welcome.
I leaned something last week.
I have DSC radio that is 2008 vintage. In the past I've heard the distress tones followed up Coast Guard voice traffics
Well last week we were out and the boat we were sailing with got the distress tones and I did not. I did hear the coast guard follow up voice traffic. Since I've had the tones before I wondered is something had gotten turned off or if something was wrong with the radio. Pulled out the manual and could find nothing that would help.
Placed a call to ICOM. Very helpful tech support person informed me that my particular radio is a Class C VHV and that I would only hear the alert tones if I was monitoring channel 70.
The newer radios and now Class D and they apparently have a back channel that constantly monitors channel 70 in the background regardless of what channel you are monitoring or using on the front side.
He did inform me that I can send a distress call using the emergency button on the radio and that I can hear any emergency related voice traffic but that unless I'm actively monitoring channel 70 I won't hear the alerts.
I inquired whether it would work to hear the tones if I set up the tri watch to have channel 70 as the third channel being monitored. I was told that won't work because the digital data packets would get messed up trying to monitor it that way.
So solution is to live with it since the radio works perfectly fine or to buy a new radio. Going to live with it until there is a real need for a new generation radio.