Marine order 25—Equipment—lifesaving [1]
Submitted by anathomson on Thu, 30/01/2020 - 16:16About
Marine order 25 sets out the requirements for:
- carriage and testing of lifesaving equipment
- the application of those requirements to different vessels
- the recovery of persons from the water.
Superseded
Reference
List of material referenced in this marine order:
- 406 MHz satellite distress beacons – Marine emergency position-indicating radio beacons (EPIRB) (IEC 61097-2, Ed. 3.0 (2008), MOD) ( [3]borrow or purchase [3]) [3]
- Code of practice for the evaluation, testing and acceptance of prototype novel life-saving appliances and arrangements; IMO resolution A.520(13) [4] International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea (SOLAS) – Chapter III ( [3]search, register or borrow [3]) [3]
- Code on alarms and indicators 2009; IMO resolution A.1021(26) [4]
- Colour standards for general purposes; AS 2700-2011 ( [3]borrow or purchase [3]) [3]
- Guidelines for shore-based maintenance of satellite EPIRBs; IMO circular MSC.1/Circ.1039 ( [3]register [3]) [3]
- Global maritime distress and safety system (GMDSS) – Part 1: Radar transponder - Marine search and rescue (SART) - Operational and performance requirements, methods of testing and required test results; IEC 61097-1 Ed. 2.0 (English 2007) ( [3]borrow or purchase [3]) [3]
- Global maritime distress and safety system (GMDSS) – Part 14: AIS search and rescue transmitter (AIS-SART) – Operational and performance requirements, methods of testing and required test results; IEC 61097-14 Ed. 1.0 (English 2010) ( [3]borrow or purchase [3]) [3]
- Guidelines on annual testing of 406 MHz satellite EPIRBs, IMO circular MSC.1/Circ.1040 ( [3]register [3]) [3]
- Guidelines for the approval of inflatable life rafts subject to extended service intervals not exceeding 30 months, IMO circular MSC.1/Circ.1328 ( [3]register [3]) [3]
- Guidelines for the approval of inflatable life rafts subject to extended service intervals not exceeding 30 months, IMO Circular MSC.1/Circ.1328 ( [3]register [3]) [3]
- International Code of Signals; IMO ( [3]access or purchase [3]) [3]
- International life-saving appliance code; IMO resolution MSC.48(66) as amended by resolutions MSC.207(81), MSC.218(82), MSC.272(85), MSC.293(87), MSC.320(89), MSC.368(93) and Correction [4]
- National Standard for Commercial Vessels [5] (NSCV) [5]
- Performance standards for survival craft radar transponders for use in search and rescue operations, IMO resolution A.802(19) [4] amended by MSC.247(83) [4]
- Recommendation on conditions for the approval of servicing stations for inflatable life rafts; IMO resolution A.761(18) [4] amended by MSC.55(66); MSC.388(94) [4]
- Revised recommendation on testing of life-saving appliances; IMO resolution MSC.81(70) amended by MSC.200(80); MSC.274(85); MSC.295(87); MSC.321(89); MSC.323(89); MSC.378(93) & Correction [4]
- Ships and marine technology – Marine radar reflectors – Part 1: Passive type; ISO 8729-1:2010 ( [3]borrow or purchase [3]) [3]
- Ships and marine technology – Marine radar reflectors – Part 2: Active type; ISO 8729-2:2009 ( [3]borrow or purchase [3]) [3]
- Ships and marine technology – Survival equipment for survival craft and rescue boats; ISO 18813:2006 ( [3]borrow or purchase [3]) [3]
- Ships and marine technology – Sea anchors for survival craft and rescue boats; ISO 17339:2002 ( [3]borrow or purchase [3]) [3]
- Uniform Shipping Laws [6] (USL) code [6]
expiry_date
Thursday 30 January 2020
Summary
Lifesaving equipment regulations and the recovery of persons from the water.
Marine Order Number
25