ex Elly 258 Posted October 5, 2018 Share Posted October 5, 2018 Boaties stranded as calls to lift marina bridge go unanswered Up to eight yachts were stuck out at sea recently when multiple calls to get a marina bridge raised were not answered and amid ongoing communication issues. Auckland Transport, which operated the lifting bridge remotely from its city operations centre (ATOC), confirmed the incident at Auckland's Milford Marina on September 9. https://www.stuff.co.nz/auckland/107431774/boaties-stranded-as-calls-to-lift-marina-bridge-go-unanswered Quote Link to post Share on other sites
khayyam 101 Posted October 5, 2018 Share Posted October 5, 2018 can't say I'm terribly surprised. It definitely seems to be stuck up at times, too. On the whole, though, I'd say that the bridge does a pretty good job of allowing boaties and pedestrians to share. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
waikiore 477 Posted October 5, 2018 Share Posted October 5, 2018 The default position is up, ie the boats have the right of way thats why it is up at night... Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Deep Purple 530 Posted October 5, 2018 Share Posted October 5, 2018 I find it amusing that AT think they are above the law requiring VHF operators to have a licence because the staff used to work in security...... Can we use those sorts of excuse when they fine us? Quote Link to post Share on other sites
harrytom 697 Posted October 5, 2018 Share Posted October 5, 2018 Quite amusing reading the comments on the article,from no licence required to obtaining a licence then you are issued a call sign??really. Should put in a operators hut like the old viaduct basin use to be before developed.Be a cushy job for me Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Deep Purple 530 Posted October 5, 2018 Share Posted October 5, 2018 Starting salary of $100k too no doubt.... Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Black Panther 1,765 Posted October 5, 2018 Share Posted October 5, 2018 Have you seen what ot costs to rent a room in Milford? Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Crazyhorse 47 Posted October 5, 2018 Share Posted October 5, 2018 I find it amusing that AT think they are above the law requiring VHF operators to have a licence because the staff used to work in security...... Can we use those sorts of excuse when they fine us? Licenses for the marine radio service became GURL some years ago, the one 'license' covers everyone. Not sure about foreign going vessels or vessels using HF. Callsigns are encoraged but not manditory but transmissions must be able to be identified. Where the AT is breaking the law is not having a RROC. A restricted radio operators certificate. Anyone can operate a type approved marine VHF so long as there is someone who holds a RROC there at the time or there is an emergency. I 'spouse we are lucky that with the relatively cheap VHF marine HTs on the market and that there is buggar all enforcement, marine VHF didn't become the next CB! Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.