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Minimum Required
Safety Equipment for
Class A
Recreational Vessels
(less than 16 ft / less than 4.9m) or Canoes and Kayaks
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Personal
Flotation
Devices
(PFDs) |
One
approved Type I, II, or III for each person on board or being towed
on waterskis etc.
Must be USCG approved.
Must be in serviceable condition. Must be properly stored. |
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NOTE:
A Type V hybrid may substituted for any Type I, II, or III device,
but must be worn whenever the vessel is underway and the person is
not in the cabin or other enclosed area.
Class A:
Every person on board under the age of six (6) must wear an approved
Type I, II, or III while the vessel is underway.
Personal
Watercraft (PWC): Everyone on
or operating a PWC must wear an approved Type I, II, III, or V PFD.
Inflatable PFDs are prohibited.
Water Skier:
Every person skiing or aquaplaning must wear an approved Type I, II,
or III PFD. Inflatable PFDs are
prohibited. |
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Fire Extinguisher
Must be USCG approved
Must be in
serviceable condition |
At least one B-I type
approved hand-held portable fire extinguisher (not required on
outboard motorboats less than 26 feet in length and not carrying
passengers for hire, if the construction of the vessel will not
permit entrapment of explosives or flammable gasses or vapors and if
the fuel tank is not permanently installed. |
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NOTE:
When an approved fixed fire
extinguishing system is installed in the machinery space(s), it may
be counted in the place of one B-I type hand-held portable fire
extinguisher. Some fire extinguishers require specific mounting
brackets for approval. Read the label on your fire extinguisher for
this information. |
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Visual Distress Signal
Required on the high sea and coastal waters only |
Must carry visual distress signals for
nighttime use. |
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NOTE:
Coastal waters means the
Atlantic Ocean, Gulf of Mexico, and all bays, sounds, harbors,
rivers, inlets, etc. where any entrance is over two (2) miles wide
to the first point where the distance between shorelines narrows to
2 miles. |
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Sound Producing Device
(bell,
horn, whistle etc.) |
Every vessel less than 12 meters (39.4
ft) in length must carry an efficient sound producing device. The
sound producing device need not meet any particular specifications,
as long as the vessel can produce signals required by the
navigational rules. |
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Backfire Flame Control |
An
effective means of controlling backfire flame of all gasoline
engines installed after April 25, 1940, except outboard motors
Backfire flame arrestors must be USCG
approved. |
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Ventilation
(Boats
built prior to August 1, 1980) |
At least two ventilator ducts fitted
with cowls or their equivalent, for the purpose of properly and
efficiently ventilating the bilges of every closed engine and
fuel-tank compartment on boats constructed or decked over after
April 25, 1940, using gasoline as fuel or other fuels having a flash
point of 110 degrees or less. |
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Ventilation
(Boats
built after August 1, 1980) |
At least two ventilator ducts for the
purpose of efficiently ventilating every closed compartment that
contains a gasoline engine and every closed compartment containing a
gasoline tank, except for those having permanently installed tanks
which vent outside the boat and contain no unprotected electrical
devices. Also, engine compartments containing a gasoline engine
having a cranking motor must contain power operated exhaust blowers
which can be controlled from the instrument panel. |
We further
suggest that you equip your vessel with an anchor and a sufficient amount of
anchor line; a de-watering device, such as a bilge pump, in the event of
flooding; and an oar, paddle or other alternative means of propulsion in
case your engine fails. If the above equipment requirements and suggestions
are met, you may be eligible to display a FWC or Coast Guard Auxiliary
safety decal. For more information, please contact your local
FWC office.
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