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*The guy who taught me to fly retired from Chicago Approach Control after 27 years with the FAA. He said pilots using OH instead of ZERO was his number one pet peeve. Jusssssss sayin'
Has anyone ever called it a 7 zero 7?
The pilots who care about someone else's radio calls, or zero/OH, or "checking in" are the ones who got beat up in high school or give pilots a bad name...
Some days I make proper sounding radio calls, some days probably not.. Go Fvck yourself if ya catch me on a lazy day..
A-B as easily as possible.. Up, cruise and down.. Pretty easy 99.999% of the time. 10k+ hours, no violations or even an ASAP... Don't make things complicated or worry about some random guy on a radio and you'll be ok
And why do pilots ask to deviate "for weather"? What other reason could there be?
And why do pilots ask to deviate "for weather"? What other reason could there be?
- I ALWAYS say "with you".
- I NEVER remember what the ATIS is so I omit it from the transmission knowing that ATC will ask if I have it and then I just say "yup". That's what I call utilizing my Tax Dollars... having a Civil Servant do that part of my job for me.
- When flying in Europe I always forget that 6000 feet is actually FL60. I'm an American and we won those World Wars so, I don't have to remember their radio phraseology. They're just lucky they ain't all speaking German.
- I've been doing this airline krap for damn near 30 years. At this point I could care less how I sound on the radio.
- Well, maybe I lied a bit in the last statement. Normally I speak in a whiny biatch voice but, I always lower it to a smooth radio-broadcaster baritone for ATC comms.
YKW
Wind check!
How to sound like a new pilot:
1. Say lots of totally unecessary words on the radio like "...checkin' in with you..."
2. Tell departure control at airports like LAX and ATL that you are "..airborne.."
3. Say "....here we go" after acknowledging an ATC clearance.
4. Say " ....no problem" after acknowedging a simple heading assignment from ATC. Optional is "no worries".
5. Always ask ATC "whaddaya need?" after giving your requested Mach# or airspeed to him.....as if ATC wasn't going to tell you unless you asked.
6. ALWAYS inform ATC that you are "with them" because they wouldn't know unless you tell them.
7. Make a busy congested frequency even more congested by pausing after reading back the new frequency and then add some useless crap like "have a good day" resulting in a blocked transmission and making the controllers day less nice. Just read back the frequency and call sign and be done with it. No one needs to be told to "have a good day". What a stupid habit.
8. UAL needs to get their pilots a professional sounding microphone on their headsets. They all sound they're flying some Cessna with a loud prop and a bunch of background air noise.
What's wrong with asking for a wind check? When the ATIS says damn near calm and you're showing a direct cross of 40 knots at 1500 feet? Your target can be as much as 15 knots off.
Say "guard!" On guard frequency every time someone accidentally transmits there. Alternatively - sophomoric baiting of the guard police by acting like a child on guard freq.
The pilots who care about someone else's radio calls, or zero/OH, or "checking in" are the ones who got beat up in high school or give pilots a bad name...
Some days I make proper sounding radio calls, some days probably not.. Go Fvck yourself if ya catch me on a lazy day..
A-B as easily as possible.. Up, cruise and down.. Pretty easy 99.999% of the time. 10k+ hours, no violations or even an ASAP... Don't make things complicated or worry about some random guy on a radio and you'll be ok
What's wrong with asking for a wind check? When the ATIS says damn near calm and you're showing a direct cross of 40 knots at 1500 feet? Your target can be as much as 15 knots off.