406 MHz beacon -> identify your town
121.5 MHz beacon -> identify your street
GPS coords -> identify your home address
Modern PLBs with GPS effectively make the two beacons superfluous (at least for hiking purposes). The GPS coordinates provide a precise location (well, 100 meters is more like the
block you live on and not your home address) that can be located with commonly available GPS receivers.
Homing in on the 121.5 Mhz beacon requires less commonly available equipment (and traditionally used in aerial searches). Ground-based search teams need a portable radio direction finder (RDF).
Does anyone know if SAR organizations (in NH or ME) own and use a portable RDF? Something like this:
https://www.amazon.com/Hammerhead-Direction-Finder-beacons-121-5MHz/dp/B00CMD9856
Like I said in my previous post, operating electronics outside their temperature range can result in failure or "work poorly". If the first reported location was accurate, that's only known in hindsight, because subsequent readings were different and served to cast doubt on the first reading. Long story short, the device was working poorly and effectively directed the rescue team to the wrong "home address".
Moral of the story is that if you're going to venture into extreme conditions, at the limit of human survivability, your gear may be at or beyond its functional limit. Another way to look at it: if you're venturing into conditions outside the operating range of your emergency devices, you might want to rethink that.