Vixen
Penultimate Amazing
Again
The Government of the Republic of Estonia
Final report on the MV ESTONIA disaster of 28 September 1994
Chapter 8 Observations after the accident.
Section 8.11 The EPIRB beacons
https://onse.fi/estonia/chapt08_6.html#5
You have also been shown that the manufacturer designates the model you cited as being the one involved as being float free, not automatic activation.
That model has a different designation.
Man up and admit the EPIRB's were automatically activated.
Why do you think MRCC Commander Montonen requested Bodö Baltic Satellite Sea alert station requested a search for a 'disappeared message'?
HSTALLINN - Car Ferry The Estonian EPIRB satellite buoys were operational, although for some reason the message they sent automatically did not progress to the alarm system. Estonian and Finnish experts tested buoys detached from sunken Estonia on Tuesday at the icebreaker Tarmo. According to Estonian radio, the buoys sent a four-hour radio message that should arrive via satellite at the ground station. Next, we want to investigate the operation of the ground stations to find out where the auto-triggered alarm message disappeared. Satellite alerts in the Baltic Sea area will be received at Bodö, Norway, which will transmit the information to the nearest maritime rescue center. Satellite alerts in the Baltic Sea may also be printed in Falmouth, England, or Toulouse, France. In connection with the Estonian accident, the absence of a satellite alarm was puzzled. The buoys were later found stranded off the coast of Estonia. JORMA ROTKO
25.1.1994
In addition, yet another source confirms the EPIRB's were automatically-activated.
From: Flashes in the NightJack A. Nelson
Other snafus contributed to the slow reaction that without doubt cost scores of lives. The Estonia was equipped with EPIRB: automatic emergency beacons. When a ship sinks, these buoy-enclosed mitters are supposed to pop to the surface and transmit the ship's position. At times this takes a few minutes until the proper satellite that initiates the message is in position. On this night, the emergency beacons aboard the Estonia did not work for reasons that are not entirely clear. The crew did possess the capability to activate the EPIRB manually, but they were probably proceeding under the assumption that the devices would automatically release once they were submerged, as they had been designed to do. Had this system operated, the rescue helicopters would have found the wreckage site much faster.