Entries tagged as ‘GPS’

EAA AirVenture 2008 logo
For the EAA Airventure 2008, the SPOT has outfitted key planes with SPOT satellite messengers for GPS tracking and flight following. Starting immediately, aviation fans can follow along online in real time at the SPOT website. http://www.findmespot.com/eaa.aspx
Planes to track include:
| B-17 Flying Fortress Thunderbird (Lone Star Flight Museum) |
Click the title or picture to see the SPOT shared page. The B-17 Flying Fortress was used by the Army Air Corps to fly strategic bombing missions over Europe during World War II. The four-engine, heavy-duty bomber was armed with .50 caliber machine guns and 5,000 pounds of bombs. Over the course of the war, 13,000 B-17s were produced, of which only 13 are still airworthy today.
Thunderbird currently resides at the Lone Star Flight Museum in Galveston, Texas, and is painted in the colors of one of the aircraft from the 303rd bomb group.
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| Ford Tri-Motor 4AT-A (Greg Herrick/Golden Wings Museum) |
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Courtesy of Airport Journals
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Click the title or picture to see the SPOT shared page.
The Ford Tri-motor, nicknamed “The Tin Goose,” was an American three-engine civil transport aircraft first produced in 1925 by Henry Ford. The Ford Tri-motor used an all-metal construction, which was beyond the standard in the 1920s. Its wings were made of aluminum and corrugated for added strength. More than 100 worldwide airlines flew the Ford Tri-motor while it was in production.
Before Greg Herrick acquired the 4AT-A, it was flown by Charles Lindbergh and Amelia Earhart, and made the first commercial flights from the U.S. to Mexico City and over the Canadian Rockies. After obtaining it in the mid-1980s, Herrick began restoring the tri-motor after years of preservation. As of 2006, the Tri-motor has been in flying condition and restored to its December 1927 appearance. Herrick’s Tri-motor is the oldest flying type example of the 18 remaining aircraft in the world. |
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Visit http://www.findmespot.com/eaa.aspx for a complete list.
Categories: Events · GPS · findmespot · spot messenger
Tagged: Airventure, Airventure 2008, B-17, eaa, flight following, flight path, Ford Tri-Motor, GPS, gps tracking, OshKosh, SPOT
On September 3, 2007, Steve Fossett, the multi-millionaire record-breaking aviator, went missing when his single engine plane disappeared in Nevada. A month later, the official search was called off. On Monday, July 14, 2008, a team led by Dr. Simon Donato set off to tackle the Sierra Nevada Mountains to find the wreckage and put closure to this mystery.
Dr. Donato will lead his small crew in a high intensity 8-day long ground search for Steve Fossett’s crash site. They will test Donato’s hypothesis that the wreckage is in their search area. They will be pushing their physical and mental limits as they cover hundred’s of kilometers during the search and aim to set a new standard in search and rescue. The team possesses the mental toughness and physical fitness to conduct large-scale ground searches quickly, which is what sets this team apart from ordinary folks. They will pack lightly, move quickly, and suffer extremes. They will explore the unexplored.
Although the team will use all-terrain vehicles when possible, the majority of the search will be conducted on foot in order to allow the team to explore difficult areas where vehicles and previous searchers were unable to reach. Conducting the search this way will allow them to reach the areas shrouded by tree cover, shaded by towering cliffs and canyons that prevented satellites and aircraft from successfully surveying.
Categories: Events · GPS · Stories · findmespot · spot messenger
Tagged: aviation, eaa, GPS, gps tracking, search for steve fossett, simon donato, SPOT, steve fossett, tracking
SPOT and Primal Quest will be presenting at Outdoor Retailer.
Date: Friday, August 8, 2008 3:00 pm
Place: Paddle Lounge, Salt Palace, Salt Lake City, Utah, Outdoor Retailer Summer Show
After the presentation, come by our booth 188 & 190, in the main hallway outside the main hall.
We’ve had a lot of great feedback from fans of Primal Quest lately, but the best testimony comes from the Primal Quest Race Operations Director, Greg Vogel:
“Primal Quest Montana was a 10-day expedition-level adventure race, with 58 teams challenging each other and the Montana mountains over a 548 mile course. Try to imagine keeping track of 232 world-class athletes spread out over this course, and then reporting their progress to the world at any one time. PQ was fortunate to partner with SPOT for GPS tracking. Their motto is “Live to tell about it” – a fit motto for a partner in such a grueling race.
In addition to providing a safer race for the participants, the SPOT tracking services made it possible for race officials and spectators, as well as fans on the website, to follow the progress of the entire field moving through the race course. Their assistance in designing the Leaderboard and Tracking sections of our website gave us results that exceeded our expectations.
The team from SPOT provided outstanding service, and the quality of the product they delivered was far better than we could have imagined. The entire experience was a very good one for us, and we look forward to partnering with them again for next year’s race.”
In addition – Tim Soyars, Medical Director summed up how SPOT helped out his team during Primal Quest:
“SPOT takes the “Search” out of “Search and Rescue”. “
Categories: Events · Reviews and Articles · Stories · spot messenger
Tagged: adventure racing, GPS, gps tracking, Montana, primal quest, race tracking
http://www.citizen-times.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=200880710124
Interesting article in the Citizen Times today about another SPOT save. Good news, sounds like the hiker will be well. The article raises a question about people using distress alerting devices with a “panic-button” mentality and calling out public safety resources unnecessarily, this seems very unlikely with the SPOT satellite messenger.
Here’s the quote we offered the author that didn’t make it into the article: ”SPOT offers a variety of messaging functions depending on the need of the subscriber. The Help message enables SPOT users to ask for non-emergency assistance and eliminates the potential of notifying emergency rescue in a panic, said Derek Moore, Public Relations for SPOT LLC. “People should always be educated and prepared when spending time in the outdoors. The SPOT 9-1-1 function offers a back-up when there is an unexpected emergency situation, and as we all know, things happen.”
Seems to us like the options with SPOT make it much less likely to cause a “panic-button” mentality than a Personal Locator Beacon which has only one option.
Here’s an excerpt from the article:
“The locator device that alerted rescuers to a lost hiker this week in the Shining Rock Wilderness Area is gaining in popularity among outdoors enthusiasts as one way to call for help in an emergency.
But rescue workers and wilderness survival experts also say the rise of affordable trackers using satellites could create a panic-button mentality that might lead to needless search operations.
Haywood County rescue officials wouldn’t say the exact nature of the 23-year-old hiker’s emergency, and he could not be reached Thursday.”
Categories: Emergency · Reviews and Articles · Stories · spot messenger
Tagged: 911, GPS, hiker, plb, save
SPOT is a major sponsor of the EAA Airventure show in Oshkosh, Wisconson for 2008, and we will be on site with incredible offers for EAA members. Come by the booth and check out how SPOT can help out pilots.
SPOT is the device the AOPA called “an a-ha! moment for general aviation.” SPOT lets you live your life and tell others exactly where you are and how you’re doing – in real time. Because SPOT uses satellites, it works in places cell phones never will.
Now you can let your spouse know you’re OK, ask for help from friends and family, or track your flightpath and show it to others back at home in real time, all while you’re in the air. In trouble? Hold the 9-1-1 button to alert emergency responders around the world for critical assistance. Of course, SPOT is just as useful when you land.
Find out more at http://www.findmespot.com
Categories: Events
Tagged: aviation, elt, flightpath, GPS, pilots

Gorge Games logo
Going to the Gorge Games? This year SPOT is a sponsor, and athletes are wearing SPOT messengers in key events: Adventure Racing, Mountain Biking and Kayaking.
For dates, tickets, and more events out the Gorge Games at http://www.gorgegames.net/
Categories: Events
Tagged: adventure racing, gorge games, GPS, kayaking, mountain biking, SPOT

We just came back from an amazing couple of weeks at Primal Quest Montana 2008 Presented By SPOT. Over 240 racers traveled over 500 miles each in the world’s most challenging race. SPOT provided each team with a SPOT, and we developed custom race tracking software, based on SPOT Shared Pages, that let friends and family and fans follow the race at home. Check out http://www.ecoprimalquest.com to find out more.
Soon, we’ll be announcing the winner of the sweepstakes to win a SPOT singed by the winning team — Team Nike http://www.eliteadventureteam.com/
Also, see the great post written by our friend Wade Nelson over at his blog hardcoreoutdoor.com http://hardcoreoutdoor.com/2008/07/04/primal-quest-2008-montana.aspx
Categories: Events · spot messenger
Tagged: adventure racing, GPS, primal quest, SPOT, tracking
SPOT is the world’s first satellite messenger. See the public web site at http://www.findmespot.com/ for more information.
We are committed to keeping people in touch wherever they go. Since we announced SPOT at the Outdoor Retailer Summer Market 2007, we have had countless people tell us about new ways that they’re using SPOT. We’ve also spent a lot of time at trade shows and special events talking with people who need a SPOT, who have a SPOT and who want a SPOT. This blog is a place for us to talk about the new, cool stuff we have going on, and to link out to our friends who are doing amazing things with SPOT.
It’s your life. Live to tell about it.
Categories: Uncategorized
Tagged: findmespot, GPS, satellite, satellite messenger, SPOT