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MarshallE
 
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I am looking at various PFD's that are auto/manual inflatable with a
harness. I know very little about the different brands and am hopeful that
others have opinions and perhaps where to purchase at discount prices.
thanks


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Larry
 
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"MarshallE" wrote in
m:

I am looking at various PFD's that are auto/manual inflatable with a
harness. I know very little about the different brands and am hopeful
that others have opinions and perhaps where to purchase at discount
prices. thanks




There's only one brand.....Sospenders

Just buy it. Get the self-inflating one in case you hit your head as you
go overboard and aren't concious to pull the lanyard to inflate. The
automatic one inflates as soon as you hit the water. I tried it myself on
ours when the CO2 carts ran out-of-date. Damned thing just went
boom!...and there I was bouncing around inflated.....

Your life's worth the money, easy....

Also has a great harness rig to go with it. Get it, too. Don't go out of
the cabin in rough weather or at night without it....ATTACHED..

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posted to rec.boats.cruising,rec.boats.building
Ryk
 
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On Thu, 16 Feb 2006 00:52:06 -0500, in message

Larry wrote:

"MarshallE" wrote in
om:

I am looking at various PFD's that are auto/manual inflatable with a
harness. I know very little about the different brands and am hopeful
that others have opinions and perhaps where to purchase at discount
prices. thanks




There's only one brand.....Sospenders


Mustang?

Ryk

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Ken Heaton
 
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Comments below:

"Ryk" wrote in message
news
On Thu, 16 Feb 2006 00:52:06 -0500, in message

Larry wrote:

"MarshallE" wrote in
. com:

I am looking at various PFD's that are auto/manual inflatable with a
harness. I know very little about the different brands and am hopeful
that others have opinions and perhaps where to purchase at discount
prices. thanks




There's only one brand.....Sospenders


Mustang?

Ryk

Back in October of 2004 Practical Sailor (Vol.39 # 19) tested a group of
PFD's, including Sospenders (and it's West Marine twin), Stearns, Crewsaver
& Mustang. In their conclusions they prefered the UK based Crewsaver for
"its excelent comfort and fit" but recommended the Mustang models if you
needed a USCG-approved vest. Mustang has redesigned their models to improve
comfort and operation since this test and are still USCG-approved. In face
the USCG uses Mustang PFD's themselves. I have an older Mustang and use it
all the time. I find it very comfortable, in fact I usually forget I have
it on.
--
Ken Heaton & Anne Tobin
Cape Breton Island, Canada
kenheaton at eastlink dot ca


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Larry
 
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Ryk wrote in
news
Mustang?

Ryk


Them, too. I have one of their survival suits, though I doubt there is
time to put it on in most emergencies that happen so fast.



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posted to rec.boats.cruising,rec.boats.building
Don White
 
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Ryk wrote:
On Thu, 16 Feb 2006 00:52:06 -0500, in message

Larry wrote:


"MarshallE" wrote in
. com:


I am looking at various PFD's that are auto/manual inflatable with a
harness. I know very little about the different brands and am hopeful
that others have opinions and perhaps where to purchase at discount
prices. thanks




There's only one brand.....Sospenders



Mustang?

Ryk


that's the ticket...
http://tinyurl.com/9vmxy
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posted to rec.boats.cruising,rec.boats.building
Harlan Lachman
 
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In article 2jZIf.3299$_62.2570@edtnps90,
"Ken Heaton" wrote:

Comments below:

"Ryk" wrote in message
news
On Thu, 16 Feb 2006 00:52:06 -0500, in message

Larry wrote:

"MarshallE" wrote in
. com:

I am looking at various PFD's that are auto/manual inflatable with a
harness. I know very little about the different brands and am hopeful
that others have opinions and perhaps where to purchase at discount
prices. thanks




There's only one brand.....Sospenders


Mustang?

Ryk

Back in October of 2004 Practical Sailor (Vol.39 # 19) tested a group of
PFD's, including Sospenders (and it's West Marine twin), Stearns, Crewsaver
& Mustang. In their conclusions they prefered the UK based Crewsaver for
"its excelent comfort and fit" but recommended the Mustang models if you
needed a USCG-approved vest. Mustang has redesigned their models to improve
comfort and operation since this test and are still USCG-approved. In face
the USCG uses Mustang PFD's themselves. I have an older Mustang and use it
all the time. I find it very comfortable, in fact I usually forget I have
it on.

All great comments. Mine is a minor consideration but one that for some
turn into a major one. Try on as many of the recommended brands and
styles that you can. Fit might matter.

I have a shorter torso for a man over 6 feet tall. The life jacket I got
was made in both short and long models. I know I would not have worn
the long one, too uncomfortable, but I almost always wear the one i
bought. These things only work if they are on so make sure you buy one
you will wear.

harlan

--
To respond, obviously drop the "nospan"?
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purple_stars
 
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PFD

another naive question on my part, i'm sure ... but does anyone else
feel a little weird trusting your life to a floating thing that has to
have air in it to keep floating ? i know they are comfortable and all,
the inflatables, because they don't inflate until you need them to
inflate. but if you were going over the side in an emergency out in
the middle of the ocean, and you could be in the water for who knows
what amount of time, would you worry about being out there with an
inflatable vest ? i imagine they have kevlar and other protections on
them to keep them from being snagged or punctured and losing their air,
but it still makes me feel sort of odd knowing that if it were cut or
punctured that it probably wouldn't keep me floating. or is it nothing
to worry about ? like maybe the inflatable vests have air compartments
so that if one is punctured the other 9 keep floating, or something
like that ?

as low tech as a foam filled vest is there's something about it i find
reassuring, that something being that if it gets punctured it won't
sink. maybe keep foam filled vests near the ditch bag and put them on
if you have time before you go over the side, keeping the inflatable on
most times in case you accidentally fall overboard ?

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posted to rec.boats.cruising,rec.boats.building
Don White
 
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purple_stars wrote:
PFD



another naive question on my part, i'm sure ... but does anyone else
feel a little weird trusting your life to a floating thing that has to
have air in it to keep floating ? i know they are comfortable and all,
the inflatables, because they don't inflate until you need them to
inflate. but if you were going over the side in an emergency out in
the middle of the ocean, and you could be in the water for who knows
what amount of time, would you worry about being out there with an
inflatable vest ? i imagine they have kevlar and other protections on
them to keep them from being snagged or punctured and losing their air,
but it still makes me feel sort of odd knowing that if it were cut or
punctured that it probably wouldn't keep me floating. or is it nothing
to worry about ? like maybe the inflatable vests have air compartments
so that if one is punctured the other 9 keep floating, or something
like that ?

as low tech as a foam filled vest is there's something about it i find
reassuring, that something being that if it gets punctured it won't
sink. maybe keep foam filled vests near the ditch bag and put them on
if you have time before you go over the side, keeping the inflatable on
most times in case you accidentally fall overboard ?


Yup! my take is that the inflatable models are great for sailors who
might not wear a PFD for various reasons... such as uncomfortable,
confining...not macho looking.
My brother-in-law almost bought the farm falling overboard while
climbing into the dinght from his houseboat. After that scare I
convinced my sister to buy the inflatable version and he does wear it.
This is what I wear... http://tinyurl.com/cupvt
and if I bought another one.. http://tinyurl.com/drsut
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Bob
 
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Ryk wrote:

I'd pick the foam vest if I knew I was going in the water. If nothing
else, mine would provide somewhat better insulation against
hypothermia, which is exactly the thing that keeps me from wearing it
when sailing around on a nice warm day. My Mustang inflatable with
harness is quite comfortable even on hot days, although I had to
relocate the approval labels to make it comfortable to wear over just
skin.


Ryk



Has anyone asked what water temprature will the boat be sailing?
When it is 90 degrees and the water is 83 degrees I use long sleved
shirt with Sospenders.

When in the PNW with water temp 52 degrees I use a Type V worksuit.
Full on flotation AND keeps the silent killer at a distance until
rescue is complete. The USCG use them. Lots of trawl deck guys in the
Bering use them. I use one. Had a Mustang Suit for a while then got a
Stearns..$280 - $320 bucks.
Cold water....................? Stay warm and float. Oh. make a harnes.
Besides everyone will think you are a Coastie on patrol.
BOb

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