Defender Marine offers a variety of life jacket rescue lights with steady on and strobe capabilities. Float on water or lights attached to a PFD can run as long as 120 hours with visibilities up to 3 miles. Manual on or automatic start in contact with water, personal rescue lights offer peace of mind for you and your crew.
How do personal rescue lights work?
Rescue lights can be attached to life jackets and come on automatically when they contact water or start with a manual switch. Lights offer a continuous beam or strobe for maximum visibility in the water.
Investing in safety is a smart thing on the water
Waterproof personal rescue lights offer up to 120 hours of strobe light signals and some work submerged up to ten feet. That?s a lot of safety! On the other hand, simple, inexpensive light sticks that ?break and glow? when attached to a personal floatation device can increase the visibility of a person floating on the water?s surface to passing boats and aircraft. Even a small investment in safety is smart on the water.
How do life jacket lights work?
Contact with water (salt or fresh) turns automatic lights on while some lights have manual switches. Strobe lights and continuous lights run on battery power; some lights are rechargeable. Snap clips attach lights to PFDs and some lights boast rounded corners to protect inflatable life jackets from damage.
Visual Signals
From day shapes to man overboard visual signals, Defender Marine has a full line of visual safety signals for any size boat. Satellite signaling beacons, including personal location beacons, offer the highest level of locating technology while reflective tape, floats, and buoys serve the clear safety needs of all vessels.
Safety signals for smaller craft
Never underestimate the power of reflective tape, a few more wraps on your life ring are always a good idea. Light beacons for nighttime distress signaling work a bit longer than flares and offer a sea-level homing signal for even the smallest boats. Man overboard distress signals and buoys, as well as personal location beacons for life jackets, are those safety signals boaters never want to use but may be a wise addition to the small boat safety kit.
What are the best distress signals available?
Marine visual signals include flags, buoys, and beacons. For boats that spend plenty of time offshore, satellite EPIRBS and personal location devices offer the most complete distress signal available. EPIRBS and personal location devices are big investments and could contain more technology than select boaters need. Light beacons and man overboard buoys, on the other hand, are good options for every boat.
Safety options - what you need to know
For boats that spend time at anchor or under low power, such as sailboats not on the wind, day shape flags provide a daylight visual clue to coming vessels. The small, black flags of different shapes speak volumes! Dive boats and those with regular swimmers can put out buoys to ward off coming boats. Visual signals are meant to do just that - signaling of the boats doesn't always mean your crew is in distress!