|
Competitors, Race Organizers, Liferaft Retailers and Liferaft Repackers have all requested a clarification of the ISAF Special Regulations with US SAILING Prescriptions with regards to Liferafts. This document attempts to clarify the situation to all. If you have any specific questions, please write US SAILING Safety at Sea Committee Temporary Chairman Bruce Eissner. Click Here For Frequently Asked Questions. This should also clarify how far in the future currently approved rafts will be accepted.
ISAF OFFSHORE SPECIAL REGULATIONS 2004-2005 Liferaft
Extract with
US SAILING prescriptions
4.20
Liferafts 4.20.1
Liferaft Construction a)
Liferaft(s) shall be provided capable of carrying the whole crew and
meeting the following requirements: (MoMu0,1,2) b)
Liferaft(s) shall be built in accordance with SOLAS regulations (see
the LSA code 1997 Chapter IV published by IMO) except that
modifications in 4.20.1 (b)(I) and (ii) below are acceptable (MoMu0) i
A liferaft which in all other respects is built to SOLAS
regulations may however have a capacity of 4 persons or more
(otherwise the smallest SOLAS liferaft is for 6 persons) (MoMu0) ii
A SOLAS liferaft may be stowed in a purpose-built compartment
as in 4.20.2(b) in lieu of a conventional transportable rigid
container (MoMu0) c)
Each liferaft shall contain at least a SOLAS "A" pack
(MoMu0) d)
Liferaft(s) shall be either: (MoMu1,2) i
in accordance with SOLAS (which may be varied by 4.20.1(b)(I)
and (b)(ii)), and also (varying 4.20.1 (c)) with the option of a
SOLAS "B" pack, or
(MoMu1,2) ii in
accordance with Special Regulations Appendix A Part I or Part II
(Appendix A Part I is for liferafts manufactured before 1/03 (1/06
in the U.S.) which still have a valid service life and
Appendix A Part II is the required standard for all other non-SOLAS
liferafts)
(MoMu0,1) e)
When ISO 9650 is published as an International Standard (not a
draft) it will be considered for possible acceptance as an
alternative to the ISAF Special Regulations Appendix A Part II
specification. (MoMu1,2) US
SAILING recommends that liferafts be equipped with insulated floors
for events that take place in waters of less than 68 deg F. (20 deg
C) (MoMu1,2) US
SAILING prescribes that liferafts shall be equipped with canopies.
(MoMu1,2) 4.20.2
Liferaft Stowage A
Liferaft shall be stowed either: a)
in a transportable rigid container on the working deck or in the
cockpit, or (MoMu1,2) b)
in a purpose-built rigid compartment opening into or adjacent to the
cockpit or working deck, or opening through the transom, containing
liferaft(s) only, provided that: (MoMu1,2)
i) each
compartment is watertight or self-draining (self-draining compartments
will be counted as part of the cockpit volume except when entirely
above working deck level or when draining independently overboard
from a transom stowage); and
(MoMu1,2) ii) the cover
of each compartment is capable of being easily opened under water
pressure: and (MoMu1,2) iii)
the compartment is designed and built to allow the liferaft to be
removed and launched quickly and easily; or (MoMu1,2) c)
(only available to yachts with age or series date before 6/01)
packed in a valise not exceeding 40kg securely stowed below deck
adjacent to the companionway (MoMu1,2)
d)
A SOLAS liferaft may only be stowed in accordance with either
4.20.2(a) or (b) (MoMu0,1,2) e)
It is strongly recommended that f)
Liferaft storage follow 4.20.2(b) above; and
(MoMu1,2) g)
liferafts of more than 40kg weight should be stowed in such a way
that they can be dragged or slid into the sea without significant
lifting; and (MoMu0,1,2)
h)
the yacht end of the painter should be permanently made fast to a
strong point on board the yacht; and
(MoMu0,1,2) i)
on a multihull, liferaft stowage should be such that the liferaft
can be readily removed and launched regardless of whether or not the
yacht is inverted. (Mu0,1,2) 4.20.3
Recovery Time a)
Each raft shall be capable of being got to the lifelines or launched
within 15 seconds. (MoMu0,1,2)
4.20.4
Liferaft servicing and inspection a)
Servicing and/or inspection certificates or copies shall be kept on
board the yacht (MoMu0,1,2) b)
Every SOLAS liferaft shall have a valid annual certificate of new or
serviced status from the liferaft manufacturer or the manufacturer's
approved service station
(MoMu0,1,2) c)
For liferafts built to Special Regulations Appendix A part I each
liferaft shall either have a valid annual certificate of new or
serviced status from the liferaft manufacturer or the manufacturer's
approved service station, or when a manufacturer so specifies it
shall annually be inspected (not necessarily unpacked) and the yacht
provided with written confirmation by the manufacturer or the
manufacturer's approved service station stating that the inspection
was satisfactory. (MoMu1,2) d)
A liferaft built in accordance with Special Regulations Appendix A
part II shall either have a valid annual certificate of new or
serviced status from the liferaft manufacturer or the manufacturer's
approved service station, or when the liferaft has been built to
follow the option of an extended period between initial services the
liferaft, provided the manufacturer so specifies, shall have its
first service no longer than 3 years after commissioning and its
second service no longer than 2 years after the first. Subsequent
services shall be at intervals of not more than 12 months. (MoMu1,2) e)
Notwithstanding the specified servicing periods it is strongly
recommended that a liferaft should be carefully inspected externally
at least annually and taken for servicing if there is any sign of
damage or deterioration. 4.21
Grab Bags 4.21.1
Grab Bag or emergency container for multihulls without liferafts
(Mu3,4) a) A
multihull without a liferaft shall stow in a watertight compartment,
or in a grab bag supplied with a lanyard and clip, accessible with
the multihull upright or inverted, the following items:- b)
Note: it is not required to duplicate items below which are already
required by Special Regulations to be on board - this regulation
covers only the stowage of those items:- c) a
watertight hand-held marine VHF transceiver plus a spare set of
batteries d) a
watertight flashlight with spare batteries and bulb e) 2
red parachute and 3 red hand flares f) a
watertight strobe light with spare batteries g) a
knife 4.21.2
Grab Bag to accompany liferafts (MoMu0,1,2) a) A
yacht with a liferaft is recommended to stow in a grab bag with a
lanyard and clip, the following items:- b)
Note: it is not required to duplicate items below which are already
required by Special Regulations to be on board - this regulation
covers only the stowage of those items:- c) a
watertight hand-held marine VHF transceiver plus a spare set of
batteries d) a
watertight flashlight with spare batteries and bulb e) 2
red parachute and 3 red hand flares and cyalume-type chemical light
sticks f)
watertight hand-held EPFS (Electronic Position-Fixing System) (eg
GPS) g) an
SART (Search and Rescue Transponder) h) dry
suits or survival bags i)
second sea anchor for the liferaft (not required if the liferaft has
already a spare sea anchor in its pack) (recommended standard ISO
17339) with swivel and >30m line diameter >9.5 mm j) two
safety tin openers k)
406MHz or type "E" EPIRB registered to the yacht (see
4.19.2) l)
first-aid kit m)
water n)
signalling mirror o)
high-energy food q)
nylon string, polythene bags, seasickness tablets r)
watertight hand-held aviation VHF transceiver (if race area
warrants) US Edition 2004 - 2005 ISAF OFFSHORE SPECIAL REGULATIONS Appendix A, Part I Including
US SAILING Prescriptions Minimum
Specifications for Yachtsmen’s Liferafts for
liferafts manufactured prior to 1/03 (at least 1/06 in the US) Appendix
A does not cover liferafts intended for category 0 races US
Edition 2004 - 2005 ISAF OFFSHORE SPECIAL REGULATIONS Appendix A, Part II Including
US SAILING Prescriptions APPENDIX
A part II Minimum
Specifications for Yachtsmen’s Liferafts Appendix
A does not cover liferafts intended for category 0 races 1.0
Introduction In
his report of 12/00 and in the absence of a comprehensive up-to-date
standard for yachtsmen’s liferafts the Sydney Coroner recommended
afte the Hobart Race 1998 that yachtsmen’s liferafts should comply
with the construction requirements of Regulation 15 of SOLAS 1960.
SOLAS rafts are generally heavier, more expensive and more bulky
than yachtsmen’s liferafts and are designed for commercial
vessels. In
1999 the ORC Special Regulations Committee (now the Special
Regulations sub Committee of ISAF the International Sailing
Federation) established a working party Although
work has been in progress by ISO (the International Standardization
Organization) for some 14 years the expected publication of ISO 9650
covering yachtsmen’s liferafts, has not taken place. When ISO 9650
is available for public use it will be studied by the Special
Regulations sub-Committee with a view to it being accepted in lieu
of, or superceding, the Appendix A Part II specification. In
events under ISAF Offshore Special Regulations in categories 0, 1
and 2 liferafts are required. A liferaft for Category 0 shall be a
SOLAS model with variations permitted by Special Regulations. A
liferaft in categories 1 and 2 shall be either: (i)
a SOLAS model with variations permitted by Special Regulations, or (ii)
an “ORC” model in compliance with Special Regulations Appendix A
Part I provided the raft was manufactured before 1/03 (at
least 1/06 in the US), or (iii) an “ISAF” model in compliance with Special Regulations Appendix A Part II.
QUESTION
"I am getting ready to purchase a Winslow Life Raft Model
II-100SL/M with a 10 person rated capacity. Does this particular
life raft comply with the requirements for the Chicago-Mac race? And
if this does this comply for how long? Any guidance will be greatly
appreciated."
ANSWER
Your first question should be addressed to the Chicago-Mac Race
Committee who set the requirements you are trying to meet.
Will they accept it?
US SAILING has no way of telling whether any specific liferaft complies to the specifications which are set by the ISAF Special Regulations. The individual race organizers are to make these judgments.
US SAILING has entered into the liferaft specification only in an
attempt to allow sailors/racers in the US a wider choice of rafts
in Cat 1 and 2 races while the ISAF waits for an
International Standard raft to be defined and approved.
We have modified the dates set by ISAF to give the US racers the
choice of either a SOLAS, "ORC" or "ISAF
" raft until at least the beginning of 2006.
The answer to your question about how long a compliant raft you
might buy today will comply with the regulations, is that US
SAILING does not intend to declare any existing rafts 'illegal' if
they are purchased before January 2006.
|