Boating

ELECTRONIC­S

+ 1st Mate’s electronic ECOS provides remote engine safety

- By Kevin Falvey

With most operators of boats under 26 feet in length overall now required to use an engine cutoff switch (ECOS), alternativ­es to the ubiquitous safety lanyard bear considerat­ion. Take the 1st Mate. An electronic ECOS, it’s a small fob that one wears like a watch or clips on like a key ring.

The 1st Mate allows the captain to move around the boat, obviating complaints regarding the inconvenie­nce of lanyards. It also allows restarting the engine immediatel­y following a man overboard (MOB), unlike a lanyard ECOS, which, unless crew aboard possess a spare lanyard, may not allow restarting the engine if the skipper goes overboard.

The 1st Mate system is an app-integrated marine safety and security product developed through a partnershi­p between Mercury Marine and Fell Marine. It integrates the benefits of Mercury’s industryle­ading SmartCraft and Fell Marine’s WiMEA protocol, using WiMEA to communicat­e between a hub and fobs, which proves faster and more robust than Bluetooth in marine safetycrit­ical situations. The 1st Mate system also uses Bluetooth for communicat­ion between app-loaded devices. Furthermor­e, the 1st Mate can be upgraded wirelessly to unlock new features in the future.

During a captainove­rboard event, the 1st Mate cuts the engines; sounds an alarm on mobile devices with the app, its hub, and other fobs on the boat; and displays the GPS location and directions to the MOB. This enables crew to safely maneuver directly back to the victim.

Besides working for the skipper, up to seven crew can be protected by 1st Mate fobs ($128 each for passenger fobs), including pets. Should fob-wearing crew go over, the alarm and MOB location and direction are immediatel­y sent to the app and system, though the engines are not cut.

Additional­ly, the 1st Mate can notify emergency contacts that an MOB occurred, and provide location, time and heading informatio­n to the event. This adds additional safety, particular­ly for a boater out on the water alone.

The 1st Mate system also provides security. Just like your car’s fob, the engine(s) will not start without the captain fob aboard. You can designate different fobs as the captain to allow others to use your boat. You can also disable the system for a service tech. Forgot your fob? The app affords backup startabili­ty. Dropped your phone? Touch the provided key-ring-ready NFC medallion to the hub.

Installati­on is DIYsimple, according to the 1st Mate team, requiring just four screws to mount the sandwich-size hub and the running of one cable. That’s for boats with Mercury SmartCraft or NMEA 2000. Boats without a network require more effort to tap into the ignition circuit. Basic ECOS functional­ity is said to be plug-and-play, while setting up individual fobs and a list of emergency contacts will take a few minutes. In-app and web-based written and video instructio­ns are provided.

The system is available for SmartCraft engines from singles to sixes. Non-SmartCraft engines are supported up to triple installati­ons. Pricing ranges from $571.41 for single engine boats to $999 for SmartCraft applicatio­ns with four, five and six engines.

Kits include one fob and one each of the clip-on and wearable fob holders. Additional fobs cost $128.56 each; additional wearables cost $35.70 and come in black, blue and red.

The 1st Mate system appears to offer great value, ease of use, and a trifecta of functional­ity: safety, distress messaging and security. We plan to install a system aboard one of our project boats and will report back after several months.

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