2017 OWNERS MANUAL /
34
OTHER
IMPORTANT
INFORMATION
distress alert with registration information to the responsible U.S.
Coast Guard (or International) Rescue Coordination Center (RCC).
406MHz EPIRBs with GPS (internal or attached) also provide an
immediate GPS position in the information passed to the RCC.
Geostationary satellites make detection almost immediate. If the
EPIRB does not have the ability to provide a GPS position, the pro-
cess to determine a position takes about an hour on average and
almost always less than two hours. Satellite EPIRBs also include a
homing beacon and strobe to help rescue forces quickly locate the
distress scene.
Satellite beacons have significant coverage, alerting timeliness,
position accuracy, and signaling advantages over other types of
EPIRBs (121.5 MHz). Before purchasing or using something other
than the 406 MHz EPIRB, be sure to understand the capabilities
and limitations.
Further information and a complete listing of VHF channels and
frequencies is available at: www.navcen.uscg.gov.
COMMUNICATIONS
The following applies to the Great Lakes and salt water boating:
When boating off-shore, carry communications gear such as a ma-
rine VHF-FM and/or HF transceiver(s), appropriate to the operating
area. Cellular phone coverage is available in many coastal areas.
However, cellular phones should NOT be considered a substitute for
VHF-FM marine band radios for emergency purposes.
In distress situations, press the VHF transmit button and clearly
say: MAYDAY, MAYDAY, MAYDAY. Follow this with the vessel name
and/or description, the location, nature of emergency and number
of people on-board. Then release the transmit button and wait for 10
seconds. If there is no response, repeat the MAYDAY call.
Satellite EPIRBs (406 MHz) are designed to quickly and reliably
alert rescue forces, indicate an accurate distress position, and
guide rescue units to the distress scene, even when all other com-
munications fail.
When activated, the satellite EPIRB transmits a distress signal with
a beacon-unique identifying code. The system detects the signal,
calculates an accurate distress position, checks the unique iden-
tifying code against the EPIRB registration database (vessel and
point of contact information supplied by the owner) and routes the
Summary of Contents for NXT20 2017
Page 3: ...2017 OWNERS MANUAL SAFETY KNOWLEDGE ...
Page 27: ...2017 OWNERS MANUAL 48 2017MODEL FEATURESANDSPECS ...
Page 40: ...2017 OWNERS MANUAL 74 DASHESAND VIDEOSCREENS ...
Page 42: ...2017 OWNERS MANUAL 78 XANDXTSERIESINSTRUMENTPANEL 4 3 VIDEOSCREEN XSTARINSTRUMENTPANEL ...
Page 43: ...2017 OWNERS MANUAL 80 PROSTARINSTRUMENTPANEL NXTSERIESINSTRUMENTPANEL ...
Page 58: ...2017 OWNERS MANUAL 110 XANDXTSERIES VIDEOSCREEN OPERATIONSHV450 ...
Page 67: ...2017 OWNERS MANUAL 128 XSTAR VIDEOSCREEN OPERATIONS XSTARINSTRUMENTPANEL ...
Page 80: ...2017 OWNERS MANUAL 154 PROSTAR VIDEOSCREEN OPERATIONS ...
Page 97: ...2017 OWNERS MANUAL 188 NXT OPERATIONS ...
Page 101: ...2017 OWNERS MANUAL 196 NXT20 22 VIDEOSCREEN OPERATIONS ...
Page 107: ...2017 OWNERS MANUAL 208 BOAT OPERATIONS ...
Page 158: ...2017 OWNERS MANUAL 310 PREPARATION ...
Page 172: ...2017 OWNERS MANUAL 338 CAREAND MAINTENANCE ...
Page 204: ...2017 OWNERS MANUAL 402 TRAILERS ...