MarkCorrigan
Героям слава!
Retype them then. Take screenshots so if they disappear again you can prove it.
Any update on this? I'd love to know exactly I could be proved wrong when I quoted the posts in question.
Retype them then. Take screenshots so if they disappear again you can prove it.
Whilst your father was an honourable man it doesn't follow that the Chief Engineer on the Estonia, who was in handheld radio contact with the Bridge and the guys in the engine room had the same values. Treu and Linde do not mention anything about Lembik wanting to stay behind to make sure everyone was safe. In the world of a passenger ferry, the crew are supposed to assist the passengers by helping inflate life raft and handing out lift jackets, not jumping on the first life boat out of there. Of course, it is understandable they did this but that is not the protocol expected of them.
"Float-free," not "automatically activated." You still can't grasp the quite simple difference between the two.
"Float-free," not "automatically activated." You still can't grasp the quite simple difference between the two.
Float free, no mention of automatic activation
"Float-free," not "automatically activated." You still can't grasp the quite simple difference between the two.
The excerpt is as follows:
"RECOMMENDS...
Do you see the problem with your claim?
https://www.imo.org/en/OurWork/Safety/Pages/historyofLSA-default.aspxRevised recommendation on testing of life-saving appliances (resolution MSC.81(70))
Recommendations on the testing of life-saving appliances were first adopted by the IMO Assembly in 1991, by resolution A.689(17). In 1998, the MSC, recognizing the need to introduce more precise requirements for the testing of life-saving appliances and recalling that it had amended the recommendations on several occasions since their adoption, adopted the Revised recommendation on testing of life-saving appliances (resolution MSC.81(70)), effectively replacing resolution A.689(17).
IMO calls them 'requirements' and 'recommendations' because it doesn't have the force of statutory law...
No. In the language of transportation regulation, "recommendation" and "requirement" are very different things. Thank you for playing.
It is called CHAPTER III Regulation 6 section 2.3. Just because it uses genteel language such as 'recommends' doesn't mean it is not mandatory. All of their regulations are recommendations. They are intended as guidelines with the purpose of safety at sea.
It is a shame no-one is honourable enough to admit...
The excerpt is as follows:
"RECOMMENDS Governments: (a) to ensure, as part of national type approval procedures, that any new type of 406 MHz satellite EPIRB to be deployed on board ships' h tested to confirm that it is in accordance with the IMO performance standards for 406 MHz EPIRBs (resolution A.695(17))*; confirmation that the satellite EPIRB meets part B of that performance standard can be achieved by either: (i) performing, or having performed, under national procedures, all appropriate tests; or (ii) accepting type approval test results obtained through the COSPAS-SARSAT type approval procedure (C/S T.007) and confirmed by the delivery o{ a COSPAS-SARSAT Type Approval Certificate; and (b) to encourage national type approval authorities to develop test procedures compatible, to the extent possible, with C/S T.007, if necessary in consultation with the COSPAS-SARSAT Secretariat."
*Resolution A.695 (17) can be read here: https://wwwcdn.imo.org/localresourc...MOResolutions/AssemblyDocuments/A.695(17).pdf
It was adopted on 6 Nov 1991 and came into force on 25 Nov 1991.
As George Orwell remarked the truth remains the truth no matter how much you deny it.
Recommends, it's there in caps.
Quite strange.
I pulled a few random SOLAS regulations up and see where they say this equipment or feature is mandatory on ships over this weight, or registered as this type, or having/lacking this other equipment. Yet then mentions it also being recommended at these other weights, classifications, or selection of other available devices/features.
Strange they would go to that trouble if "recommended" is merely "genteel language" for "required."
The IMO call their regulations as follows:
"In this article, we will learn about 5 important instruments which IMO uses to ensure smooth operations at the sea, backed by highest standards of maritime safety.
The 5 important instruments of IMO are:
Conventions
Protocols
Amendments
Recommendations, codes, and guidelines
Resolutions" https://www.marineinsight.com/marit...-organization-imo-every-seafarer-should-know/
At the 1988 IMO convention pursuant to the Herald of Free Enterprise inquiry 1987, the CHAPTER III Reg 6 Section 2.3
NOTING that the Conference of Contracting Governments to the
International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea, 1974 (SOLAS),
on the global maritime distress and safety system (GMDSS Conference, 1988)
adopted regulation IV/7.1.6 of the 1988 SOLAS amendments, applicable not
later than 1 August 1993, requiring the carriage of a float-free satellite
EPIRB on every ship as part of the global maritime distress and safety system,
did come into force in 25 Nov 1991 and went through the aforesaid steps one by one.
RECOMMENDS Governments: (a) to ensure, as part of national type approval procedures, that any new type of 406 MHz satellite EPIRB to be deployed on board ships' h tested to confirm that it is in accordance with the IMO performance standards for 406 MHz EPIRBs (resolution A.695(17));
Resolution A.695 (17) does stipulate float-free automatic EPIRB's.
In this case that’s significant. In these documents, when a directive is in all caps it’s understood in its precise legal meaning, not some common or “genteel” connotation.
Your doing your usual **** trick of quickly reading a document and quoting random bits you think support your trolling.
We see you