Backcountry skiing. Snowshoeing. Snowmobiling. Mountaineering. These winter sports—aside from filling your stoke-hungry heart with pure, unadulterated joy—have something in common: a risk of avalanche. Here are some sobering stats if one of your buddies gets buried. If they don’t perish immediately from an avalanche, you have roughly 18 minutes to save them. If you manage to clear their airway in that time, the survival rate is 90 percent. If they’re buried longer, their chances of surviving drops to 40 percent. Thankfully a new avy beacon, the Ortovox Diract Voice Avalanche Transceiver, can improve those odds. In order to view the video, please allow Manage Cookies
Ortovox Diract Voice makes finding an avalanche victim faster by offering voice-guided instructions through the search process. Flip the beacon from “send” to “search” mode, and it talks you through the search, with commands like: “Go to the snow surface,” “Turn around,” and “Run straight.” Ortovox’s goal with Diract Voice was to make the best recuse device by focusing on intuitive use. Its research showed that voice commands are the most direct link to the brain, and hearing a command like “run straight” can calm adrenaline and anxiety, and aid in decision-making, particularly in high-stress situations.
How to Minimize the Danger of Tree Wells
Read article
Other avalanche beacons display arrows on the screen, and they beep to let you know you’re getting closer to the buried transceiver you’re searching for. Diract Voice lets you keep your eyes on the snow, which makes it easier to navigate avalanche debris, and gives you a better chance of spotting a clue like a hat or a glove that could speed the rescue. Voice guidance is the beacon’s most unique feature, but it’s not the only. Three smart antennae auto-detect the angle of the buried beacon, automatically transmitting to the optimum antennae to hasten the rescue. The beacon uses a rechargeable lithium polymer battery. It can’t leak like disposable batteries do, and it’s got excellent cold-weather life. A Recco transmitter in the beacon harness further aids rescuers in locating people wearing the Diract Voice beacon, so it should always be donned in its harness—not stashed in a pants pocket.
Long Live the Terrible T-Bar Lift
Read article
Every company measures its beacon range slightly differently. Ortovox calculates the average avalanche at approximately 80×100 meters. Diract Voice has a search strip width of 50m. In an average sized avalanche, that means a searcher using Diract Voice can search the debris field in a single pass. One universal issue with transceivers is that toward the edges of their range, they can become unstable, send a searcher off in the wrong direction, or the signal can disappear. With Diract Voice, Ortovox focused on building a transceiver that’s predictable—with the smallest possible instability corridor, instead of striving for a beacon with the biggest range. The company’s perspective is that a massive range doesn’t make a rescue faster, but a stable display and supported decision-making does.
How to Survive an Avalanche
Pat Moore, a professional snowboarder and lifelong backwoodsman, explains how to stay calm when face… Read article
It’s also a transceiver that’s simple-looking and intuitive to use. A single button tags up to four burials. It also switches the beacon to standby mode. And, in the case of a secondary slide, it automatically switches from search or standby to transmit. It includes group check and permanent self-testing, and it’s easy to see if the beacon is in send or search: A lever flips up to switch modes. That lever also covers the on/off switch to prevent the beacon from accidentally being turned off. Diract Voice takes two to three hours to charge, lasts for a minimum of 250 hours in transmit at 50° F, and for 50 hours in search. [$380; rei.com] Get it
For access to exclusive gear videos, celebrity interviews, and more, subscribe on YouTube!
More News
Surly Releases Preamble: New All-steel 'Pavement Bike'
Enjoy Gorgeous Picture With This LG CineBeam Portable Projector
Kick Back With The RENPHO Foot Massager During Downtime
Keep Your Food Fresh With This Food Storage Containers Set
Fix Home Problems Yourself With This Cartman 148Piece Tool Set
Dream Garage: The Car and Truck Auctions We'd Bid on Right Now
All Stories
More Videos
The MJ5: Tony Hawk on His Favorite Gear, Why He Always Carries His Board, and More
Here's the Difference Between Bourbon and Whiskey
Young Guns and a Supercharged Catamaran: U.S. SailGP Team Takes on New York City
Backcountry skiing. Snowshoeing. Snowmobiling. Mountaineering. These winter sports—aside from filling your stoke-hungry heart with pure, unadulterated joy—have something in common: a risk of avalanche. Here are some sobering stats if one of your buddies gets buried. If they don’t perish immediately from an avalanche, you have roughly 18 minutes to save them. If you manage to clear their airway in that time, the survival rate is 90 percent. If they’re buried longer, their chances of surviving drops to 40 percent. Thankfully a new avy beacon, the Ortovox Diract Voice Avalanche Transceiver, can improve those odds.
In order to view the video, please allow Manage Cookies
Ortovox Diract Voice makes finding an avalanche victim faster by offering voice-guided instructions through the search process. Flip the beacon from “send” to “search” mode, and it talks you through the search, with commands like: “Go to the snow surface,” “Turn around,” and “Run straight.”
Ortovox’s goal with Diract Voice was to make the best recuse device by focusing on intuitive use. Its research showed that voice commands are the most direct link to the brain, and hearing a command like “run straight” can calm adrenaline and anxiety, and aid in decision-making, particularly in high-stress situations.
How to Minimize the Danger of Tree Wells
Read article
Other avalanche beacons display arrows on the screen, and they beep to let you know you’re getting closer to the buried transceiver you’re searching for. Diract Voice lets you keep your eyes on the snow, which makes it easier to navigate avalanche debris, and gives you a better chance of spotting a clue like a hat or a glove that could speed the rescue.
How to Minimize the Danger of Tree Wells
Read article
How to Minimize the Danger of Tree Wells
Voice guidance is the beacon’s most unique feature, but it’s not the only. Three smart antennae auto-detect the angle of the buried beacon, automatically transmitting to the optimum antennae to hasten the rescue.
The beacon uses a rechargeable lithium polymer battery. It can’t leak like disposable batteries do, and it’s got excellent cold-weather life. A Recco transmitter in the beacon harness further aids rescuers in locating people wearing the Diract Voice beacon, so it should always be donned in its harness—not stashed in a pants pocket.
Long Live the Terrible T-Bar Lift
Read article
Every company measures its beacon range slightly differently. Ortovox calculates the average avalanche at approximately 80×100 meters. Diract Voice has a search strip width of 50m. In an average sized avalanche, that means a searcher using Diract Voice can search the debris field in a single pass.
Long Live the Terrible T-Bar Lift
Read article
Long Live the Terrible T-Bar Lift
One universal issue with transceivers is that toward the edges of their range, they can become unstable, send a searcher off in the wrong direction, or the signal can disappear. With Diract Voice, Ortovox focused on building a transceiver that’s predictable—with the smallest possible instability corridor, instead of striving for a beacon with the biggest range. The company’s perspective is that a massive range doesn’t make a rescue faster, but a stable display and supported decision-making does.
How to Survive an Avalanche
Pat Moore, a professional snowboarder and lifelong backwoodsman, explains how to stay calm when face… Read article
It’s also a transceiver that’s simple-looking and intuitive to use. A single button tags up to four burials. It also switches the beacon to standby mode. And, in the case of a secondary slide, it automatically switches from search or standby to transmit. It includes group check and permanent self-testing, and it’s easy to see if the beacon is in send or search: A lever flips up to switch modes. That lever also covers the on/off switch to prevent the beacon from accidentally being turned off.
How to Survive an Avalanche
Pat Moore, a professional snowboarder and lifelong backwoodsman, explains how to stay calm when face… Read article
How to Survive an Avalanche
Pat Moore, a professional snowboarder and lifelong backwoodsman, explains how to stay calm when face…
Diract Voice takes two to three hours to charge, lasts for a minimum of 250 hours in transmit at 50° F, and for 50 hours in search.
[$380; rei.com]
For access to exclusive gear videos, celebrity interviews, and more, subscribe on YouTube!
More News
Surly Releases Preamble: New All-steel 'Pavement Bike'
Enjoy Gorgeous Picture With This LG CineBeam Portable Projector
Kick Back With The RENPHO Foot Massager During Downtime
Keep Your Food Fresh With This Food Storage Containers Set
Fix Home Problems Yourself With This Cartman 148Piece Tool Set
Dream Garage: The Car and Truck Auctions We'd Bid on Right Now
All Stories
More Videos
The MJ5: Tony Hawk on His Favorite Gear, Why He Always Carries His Board, and More
Here's the Difference Between Bourbon and Whiskey
Young Guns and a Supercharged Catamaran: U.S. SailGP Team Takes on New York City
More News
Surly Releases Preamble: New All-steel 'Pavement Bike'
Enjoy Gorgeous Picture With This LG CineBeam Portable Projector
Kick Back With The RENPHO Foot Massager During Downtime
Keep Your Food Fresh With This Food Storage Containers Set
Fix Home Problems Yourself With This Cartman 148Piece Tool Set
Dream Garage: The Car and Truck Auctions We'd Bid on Right Now
All Stories
More Videos
The MJ5: Tony Hawk on His Favorite Gear, Why He Always Carries His Board, and More
Here's the Difference Between Bourbon and Whiskey
Young Guns and a Supercharged Catamaran: U.S. SailGP Team Takes on New York City
More News
Surly Releases Preamble: New All-steel 'Pavement Bike'
Enjoy Gorgeous Picture With This LG CineBeam Portable Projector
Kick Back With The RENPHO Foot Massager During Downtime
Keep Your Food Fresh With This Food Storage Containers Set
Fix Home Problems Yourself With This Cartman 148Piece Tool Set
Dream Garage: The Car and Truck Auctions We'd Bid on Right Now
All Stories
More Videos
The MJ5: Tony Hawk on His Favorite Gear, Why He Always Carries His Board, and More
Here's the Difference Between Bourbon and Whiskey
Young Guns and a Supercharged Catamaran: U.S. SailGP Team Takes on New York City
More Videos
The MJ5: Tony Hawk on His Favorite Gear, Why He Always Carries His Board, and More
Here's the Difference Between Bourbon and Whiskey
Young Guns and a Supercharged Catamaran: U.S. SailGP Team Takes on New York City
More Videos
The MJ5: Tony Hawk on His Favorite Gear, Why He Always Carries His Board, and More
Here's the Difference Between Bourbon and Whiskey
Young Guns and a Supercharged Catamaran: U.S. SailGP Team Takes on New York City