Figure G
Slowly rotate the Tracker horizontally and
vertically in your hand, but move rapidly
during the signal search. Do not abandon
your search path until you have captured
a strong, steady signal. Ignore irregular
signals, which can sometimes be caused
by electrical interference.
Coarse Search: The coarse search is the portion of the search from where
you have detected a steady signal to where you are close to the victim.
Once the signal is consistently detected, rotate Tracker3 slowly on a
horizontal plane until the center direction light
Tracker3 is now pointed in the direction of the strongest signal. The four
lights on either side of center tell you which way to rotate Tracker3 to
engage the center light. The distance indicator
meters, how far you must travel (1 meter = 1.1 yards or 3.3 feet). If the
number on the distance indicator is increasing, you are on the same axis
as the victim's signal, but moving in the opposite direction. Turn 180
degrees, engage the center search light again, and continue your search
in the direction Tracker3 is pointing. If you are stationary, but the distance
is significantly changing, you are probably detecting the signal of another
rescuer. Make sure all rescuers are in search mode before continuing.
You may find that, while following the directional lights, your route follows
an arc. This is because Tracker3 follows the shape of the electromagnetic
signal coming from the transmitting beacon's antenna. The distance
displayed is the distance to be traveled along that signal, not the straight-
line distance from you to the victim.
Operating Instructions
is blinking.
p
tells you, in approximate
k
11