91100 100 set
to the book
- Joined
- Dec 28, 2003
- Posts
- 694
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91 said:Okay, I've been around awhile, and I've heard this lots of times in response to a radio check request, but I've never met anybody who could explain, (or find a written reference somewhere) what "five by five" means. Volume and clarity? Vice versa? Anybody?
hah...heard that one for the first time the other day...I don't think I stopped laughing until I crossed the numbers...jbud said:five by five, is a term used to let other people know that you are a loser..
see also: tally-ho
Heh, I hear it all the time around here. Heck, I've even said it just to mess around.minitour said:hah...heard that one for the first time the other day...I don't think I stopped laughing until I crossed the numbers...
Five by five...........three by four..........four by two.....or any other variation of the theme is proper radio etiquette for informing controllers or other pilots of transmission strength and quality.jbud said:five by five, is a term used to let other people know that you are a loser..
see also: tally-ho
I think using "no-joy" is better then "we're looking for traffic". It is a lot quicker and gets the point across.91 said:Okay, thanks. I agree with the tally-ho thing. And the accompanying "no-joy".
I thought that you could also include the last number on voice transmissions.dseagrav said:Actually, the third value is tone quality, only used for morse-code work.
There are letters that modify the last digit, to indicate chirp or other keying errors. We leave out the last number when on voice. 9 is a pure sine-wave, 1 is very rough AC.
pilotman2105 said:I thought that you could also include the last number on voice transmissions.
Then again, it's been 5+ years since I've picked up a ham radio, so my info is most definitely a bit "stale."