Today, while climbing out of Cumberland, MD KCBE, I somehow experienced an inadvertent ELT activation (crew fault, it won’t happen again). I was talking to ATC picking up VFR flight following when I heard the ELT in the radio. I quickly checked the ELT switch panel and saw the active light flashing. I immediately reset the ELT and pressed on wondering if anyone observed the ELT. This is a 406 mhz ELT. Within a couple of minutes, my phone rang. I was unable to answer it, but a message was left saying they were the Air Force and were checking on the ELT activation. A minute later, they called my backup contact who was in the airplane with me and left the same message. 15 minutes later ATC told us that they had been contacted about the ELT activation and wanted to confirm everything was ok, which we confirmed all good and that we would be calling the Air Force on landing in KFDK. On landing, I promptly called the number they left and they said they were following me on flight tracking software. They had the lat and long of the activation from the position data that is output to the ELT and could see that I was still moving when the ELT was active.
Now this isn’t the same as a crash, with the antenna buried or broken, but is did prove that the 406 mhz freq is actively being monitored and that they get your precise position in a short transmission, in this case maybe a minute. Further, they followed up with the registered emergency contacts, followed up with ATC and did realize I was still aloft by using a flight tracking app. I am pretty sure that if the ELT were to activate in a crash, and the antenna was intact enough to get the transmission out, someone would be looking for me. By the way, in my memory items for an engine out is “turn on ELT, while still in the air and the antenna isn’t damaged.
This experience confirms that getting the signal out, even for a minute, will get my position to rescuers.
I hope that helps those wondering what good a 406mhz ELT does.
Now this isn’t the same as a crash, with the antenna buried or broken, but is did prove that the 406 mhz freq is actively being monitored and that they get your precise position in a short transmission, in this case maybe a minute. Further, they followed up with the registered emergency contacts, followed up with ATC and did realize I was still aloft by using a flight tracking app. I am pretty sure that if the ELT were to activate in a crash, and the antenna was intact enough to get the transmission out, someone would be looking for me. By the way, in my memory items for an engine out is “turn on ELT, while still in the air and the antenna isn’t damaged.
This experience confirms that getting the signal out, even for a minute, will get my position to rescuers.
I hope that helps those wondering what good a 406mhz ELT does.