MauleSkinner
Touchdown! Greaser!
PilotStudent
PilotStudent
I heard Tally Ho last week. Controller responded with a firm but professional “I need an in sight”Tally Ho!
Yes, it's hard to get through Stick and Rudder without rolling your eyes at all the uses of the word "flippers".“Flippers”= Elevator
Anyone who was ever stationed in the UK knows that term and keeps it near and dear to their heart.WOXOF
Indefinite ceiling zero, sky obscured, visibility zero in fog. Did I miss one? It's been a while.WOXOF
WOXOF
the blonde scheduler that I used to work with was known behind her back as WOXOF.Indefinite ceiling zero, sky obscured, visibility zero in fog. Did I miss one? It's been a while.
Well pre 1996 that would be accurate. It can also mean “two sheets to the wind” or reference to an infamous room that used to be at the NAS Miramar O Club.Indefinite ceiling zero, sky obscured, visibility zero in fog. Did I miss one? It's been a while.
SASome other bygone aviation weather abbreviations.
Full radar power
I don't know - can't surveillance aircraft crank up the power?
As a young Lt in my first ops squadron, I had a grizzled Cold War era O-5 that once told me I was born about 30 years to late.… an infamous room that used to be at the NAS Miramar O Club….
Add "O Club" to the list of obsolete aviation terms. As Bob Hope said, "Thanks for the memories."As a young Lt in my first ops squadron, I had a grizzled Cold War era O-5 that once told me I was born about 30 years to late.
The context behind when and why he told me that is perfectly relevant to that era.
Often used Saturday mornings, like dude, I was WOXOF last night.WOXOF
O club ain’t a thang any more?? Has NCO Club and Enlisted Club gone by the wayside also ???Add "O Club" to the list of obsolete aviation terms. As Bob Hope said, "Thanks for the memories."
O club ain’t a thang any more?? Has NCO Club and Enlisted Club gone by the wayside also ???
O club ain’t a thang any more?? Has NCO Club and Enlisted Club gone by the wayside also ???
Call me old school but I don’t think combining alcohol and all ranks is a good idea in a club atmosphere. Now I get it, you can have that happen in a civilian club off base but to invite that type of gathering on base is looking for trouble. Plus, I think an E Club, NCO Club or an O Club, builds identity and camaraderie within similar ranks.Most of the Army and AF installations I frequented have shifted to a combined/consolidate club. Benefits/drawbacks and cultural change, I guess.
Even Nellis is a combined club now.
Call me old school but I don’t think combining alcohol and all ranks is a good idea in a club atmosphere. Now I get it, you can have that happen in a civilian club off base but to invite that type of gathering on base is looking for trouble. Plus, I think an E Club, NCO Club or an O Club, builds identity and camaraderie within similar ranks.
As a practical matter, it probably doesn't much matter anymore. I got out of the AF in 2007, and at most of the bases I was at, pretty much nobody went to the clubs anyway. Typically just some retirees at the lunch hour. They were constantly having membership drives to boost membership. The decrease in membership can be attributed to many factors, but these are the ones I saw, and heard people commenting on:Call me old school but I don’t think combining alcohol and all ranks is a good idea in a club atmosphere. Now I get it, you can have that happen in a civilian club off base but to invite that type of gathering on base is looking for trouble. Plus, I think an E Club, NCO Club or an O Club, builds identity and camaraderie within similar ranks.
Military Making Officers’ Clubs ‘Inclusive,’ Open to All Ranks
The Army is changing the rules for one of its officers’ clubs to be more “inclusive,” opening membership at Fort Myer to service members of any rank.freebeacon.com
Yeah in Okinawa I went to the E Club all the time because I lived on base. Like on deployment, when you can’t go out in town, you congregate in a make shift club on base. In the states there are far better places to go and if you live out in town, there’s not much point in driving back to base to go to a club.As a practical matter, it probably doesn't much matter anymore. I got out of the AF in 2007, and at most of the bases I was at, pretty much nobody went to the clubs anyway. Typically just some retirees at the lunch hour. They were constantly having membership drives to boost membership. The decrease in membership can be attributed to many factors, but these are the ones I saw, and heard people commenting on:
1. Back in the day, many bases were out in the middle of nowhere. In other words, not much else to do for recreation. So you go to the club. Now, the towns have generally expanded and there is lots of stuff to do off base.
2. Changing housing culture. As an officer, I never once lived in base housing. I lived 15 minutes to an hour away. So the club wasn't really "local" to me, and wouldn't be where I'd even think of to hang out.
3. Changing culture and rules and enforcement on alcohol. During my time, any kind of alcohol incident became almost an instant career-killer. We're not just talking DUIs, we're talking almost any kind of buffoonery that used to just be laughed off. So it became "safer" to drink off base in many people's opinions.
4. Changing perception of the base as a whole. In the past it was everything - your workplace, where you lived, your social center, recreation area, where you went shopping, everything. You literally never needed to leave for anything. So the club was a natural place to go. Now, many more people live off base than used to, many base facilities are open inconvenient hours, etc. So anymore, the base for many people is simply a workplace. You go there in the morning and leave in the afternoon.
Some other reasons, of course, but those are the big ones I saw. I acknowledge that my experience ends in 2007 or shortly thereafter, so it may not be relevant anymore, but I'm guessing not much has changed.
GreenhouseWindscreen
Haven’t heard of that one.Decca