🚨 1. Pyrotechnic Flares (Traditional Flares)

These are the classic “firework-style” distress signals.

Types of Pyrotechnic Flares

TypeUseVisibility
Red Aerial Flares (Shooting)To alert distant boats/aircraftUp to 500–1,000 ft ascent
Red Handheld FlaresBest when rescuers are nearby1–5 miles
Orange Smoke FlaresDaytime only; excellent for aircraftHighly visible in daylight

Pros

  • Extremely bright
  • Universal recognition
  • USCG-approved

Cons

  • Expire every 42 months
  • Fire hazard
  • Produce heat, sparks
  • Can be hard to store on a small boat

Required?

YES — if operating on coastal waters, the ocean, or the ICW, you must carry either:
• USCG-approved pyrotechnic flares OR
• A USCG-approved electronic (e-flare) plus an orange distress flag.


🔦 2. Electronic Visual Distress Signals (eVDSD / e-Flares)

These are replacing traditional flares for many boaters.

Examples

  • Sirius Signal C-1003
  • Weems & Plath SOS eVDSD

What They Do

Floating Locator Electronic SOS Beacon Kit

  • Flash the internationally recognized SOS signal
  • Continuous light for hours
  • Daytime “orange flag” included

Pros

  • No expiration
  • No heat/fire
  • Legal for night use as a replacement for flares

Cons

  • Not as bright as an aerial flare
  • For night use only (must also carry a distress flag for daytime)

🚩 3. Distress Flags (Daytime Visual Signals)

Common USCG-Approved Flags

Color/ShapeMeaning
Orange square + black square & circleOfficial USCG daytime distress flag (boats < 16 ft)
Signal mirrorUsed to flash sunlight to attract aircraft
Waving armsUniversal “I need help” gesture

📣 4. Sound Signals (Audible Distress)

From Nav Rules Rule 37 (Distress Signals)

Recognized Audible Distress Signals

  • Continuous sounding of a horn
  • Five short blasts (danger signal, used before the situation becomes full emergency)
  • Gun fired at one-minute intervals (historical, not practical now)

Your Robalo already includes a horn (required equipment) .


📡 5. VHF Radio Distress Options

This is the most important modern distress tool.

OPTION A — MAYDAY Voice Call

Over channel 16:

“MAYDAY MAYDAY MAYDAY
This is Boat Name / Registration.
We are located at…
Nature of emergency…
Number of people aboard…
Description of vessel…
Request immediate assistance.”

OPTION B — DSC Distress Button (Digital Distress)

If your radio has DSC and an MMSI programmed:

  • Press and hold the DISTRESS button
  • Sends GPS position + identity automatically
  • Continues transmitting until acknowledged

This ties directly into your Simrad GO XSE — you will see incoming AIS/DSC targets on the chart.


🚢 6. AIS-Based Distress Signaling

There are AIS devices that broadcast your emergency to nearby AIS receivers (including your Simrad’s AIS feature).

Types

  • AIS MOB devices (personal, auto-activate when submerged)
  • EPIRB-AIS hybrids (EPIRB for satellite, AIS for local rescue)

These show up on chartplotters within ~5 miles with a big red “MOB” symbol.


🛰️ 7. EPIRBs & PLBs

EPIRB (Emergency Position Indicating Radio Beacon)

  • Registered to the boat
  • Float-free or manual
  • 406 MHz satellite distress signal
  • Tells the Coast Guard:
    • your location
    • your ID
    • your emergency
  • Works offshore and in remote areas where VHF range is limited
  • Best long-range rescue tool

PLB (Personal Locator Beacon)

  • Smaller; registered to you, not the boat
  • Manually activated
  • Best for single passengers, kayaks, crew, etc.

🟠 8. Dye Markers & Additional Visual Signals

Not required but useful:

  • Sea dye markers (bright green patch visible from aircraft)
  • Strobe lights (constant flashing light for nighttime)
  • Flashlights or high-power LEDs
  • Smoke signals (daytime)

📜 9. The Official U.S. Coast Guard Distress Signals (All Recognized Methods)

From NAVRULES Annex IV – Distress Signals :

Recognized distress signals include:

  • Red flares (handheld or aerial)
  • Orange smoke
  • Orange flag with black square and circle
  • Continuous horn blast
  • Flames on a vessel (signal fire)
  • MAYDAY by radio
  • SOS (• • • — — — • • •)
  • DSC distress alert
  • EPIRB/PLB activation
  • Arm signals (waving arms slowly up and down)
  • Square flag + ball (any object above)
  • Position-indicating lights (like AIS SART)
  • Electronic SOS light

🧭 10. What You Should Carry on Your Robalo R202EX

According to required safety equipment in your Robalo manual (PFDs, fire extinguishers, distress signals, horn, etc.) :

Minimum Recommended Set for You

1 eVDSD Electronic Flare
1 USCG Orange Distress Flag
VHF Radio with DSC + MMSI
AIS-equipped VHF or standalone AIS
Simrad GO XSE showing AIS targets
Horn (built in)
Waterproof flashlight
Whistle (attached to PFDs)
Optional EPIRB or PLB (huge safety upgrade)

Since you boat around the ICW and sometimes inlet/coastal waters, these give you the fastest response time.


⭐ Summary: What to Use When

Immediate life-threatening emergency

  • Press DSC DISTRESS
  • Broadcast MAYDAY
  • Activate EPIRB/PLB
  • Launch an aerial flare if night/low visibility

Rescue aircraft/helicopter nearby

  • Use handheld red flare or smoke
  • Use signal mirror (daytime)

Distant boats at night

  • Use eVDSD electronic flare
  • “SOS” flashlight signal

Distant boats during the day

  • Orange flag
  • Smoke flare