Old4New Lifejacket Exchange Hitting the Regions

I picked up a couple last year and they're pretty decent auto inflating jackets

www.royallifesavingwa.com.au/programs/old4new/exchange-events

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Officially off the Pies bandwagon


Posts: 200

Date Joined: 30/12/08

 Whitworths have manual

Sat, 2017-07-08 09:54

 Whitworths have manual inflating ones for $50 at the moment

Faulkner Family's picture

Posts: 17861

Date Joined: 11/03/08

 yeah bit if your in the

Sat, 2017-07-08 11:29

 yeah bit if your in the water cold and pannicking you would struggle to blow 1 up not to mention if you knocked out cold. better to pay the extra and get an auto inflate one

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RUSS and SANDY. A family that fishes together stays together

Posts: 2006

Date Joined: 16/05/09

Manual inflation mean you

Mon, 2017-07-10 07:29

Manual inflation mean you pull a cord to activate the jacket .

Posts: 200

Date Joined: 30/12/08

 Auto not necessarily the

Sun, 2017-07-09 14:15

 Auto not necessarily the answer. If you are thrown into the water and underneath the hull, how are you going to get out with a fully inflated vest? If you are unconsicous and face down you'll drown anyway although properly designed pfds should right you. Another thing is that an auto one may inflate in the rain or from spray.

Jackfrost80's picture

Posts: 8047

Date Joined: 07/05/12

Infinite more chance of being

Sun, 2017-07-09 19:03

Infinite more chance of being thrown into the water unconcious than being trapped in a hull.

Won't happen with a type 1 PFD.

They don't.

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Officially off the Pies bandwagon

Lavs's picture

Posts: 174

Date Joined: 30/04/12

I had the opportunity to

Sun, 2017-07-09 22:01

I had the opportunity to attend an info night last week about flares, life jackets and epirbs... I have to admit there was a lot of stuff which I "assumed" I knew, and didn't.

To answer some of this stuff... They take more than a bit of spray to set off, but on the off chance it happened you can deflate them and recharge them for about $20 when you get home.

They inflate around your neck and over your chest (not your back) and so it's impossible to float face down.

If you happen to be stuck under an upturned hull, you could manually deflate it, then manually reinflate once you're out.

I used to think that wearing one of these inflating PFDs was over the top, but gotta admit the I'm coming around.