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With all this talk about inability to raise USCG on HF SSB let me relate my
experiences in two high seas emergencies. I was aboard a commercial tuna boat fishing between Midway Island and Japan. In the first incident a boat nearby had a crewman whose hand got caught in machinery and was severely mangled. Too far for helo medivac so what was needed was emergency medical advice and clearance to put the injured guy ashore at Midway, several days away. No answer to calls to USCG on 2182, 4125 etc. Although I am not a ham, I broke into a net on 20 meters and was answered by a guy named Danny in New Guinea. He immediately phone patched through to an emergency room doctor in the US who gave hours of guidance on how to treat the hand and save it. He also contacted the CG who got the Navy to give clearance for a Midway landing. The next incident was a very very weak mayday I heard on some 8 MHz marine channel. The distressed vessel could not hear me nor was it heard by anyone else. It was a fishing vessel about 200 miles from Hawaii and it had suffered a major engine room fire. It was taking on water and had no power for pumps. I got the vessel name and position thank goodness. All calls to USCG went unanswered. In desperation I finally tuned up on 11179 USB and called a Mayday Relay. I was anwered by a Marine Corps C 130 air refueling tanker call sign QB 0x? which was flying off southern Calif. The radio op on the plane was really sharp and in no time had relayed all the info to the USCG. The boat was saved, no lives lost. The lesson? Use all your resources, know HF aircraft freqs, etc. Know ham bands. Hams are generally very helpful in a true emergency. 5696 USB is a USCG aircraft channel. Its a good one to have in your freq list. Listen to it, there is almost always some traffic on it if you listen for 15 or 20 min. BTW, all the calls were made on an "illegal" Drake TR 7 modified to operate anywhere between 1.5 and 30 MHz. Our "legal" SSB was crystal controlled controlled and had only official ITU marine channels. |