Wagondriver
Line Up and Wait
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- Mar 7, 2020
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375Taylor
I do, but then I also monitor 3 frequencies whenever I’m flying.
What else are you going to do with a handheld and there is no emergency at the moment?Even my handheld will monitor 121.5 no matter what my "active" frequency is.
TRANSMISSION? Probably not many. RECEPTION? I bet many let it through. My old KMA 24 certainly does. I put 121.5 into radio 2 and put that into the overhead speaker. Lets me monitor it without being overly distracted.What radio/audio panel doesn't automatically mute the radio being monitored when there's a transmission on the primary?
I guess I've never used one that old.TRANSMISSION? Probably not many. RECEPTION? I bet many let it through. My old KMA 24 certainly does. I put 121.5 into radio 2 and put that into the overhead speaker. Lets me monitor it without being overly distracted.
The ones I’ve flown that are like yours have been very rare. As in I can’t remember any but I’m not willing to say I never have because I may have forgotten.I guess I've never used one that old.
Post #2.Quick question. Where can I now find the FDC NOTAM requiring guard being monitored?
Post #2.
First, I LOVE my KMA 24. It’s the only one I know that will let me listen to one source in my ears and another on the overhead speaker (I’m guessing the KMA 20 and some other older ones do too). I haven’t seen a new PS or Garmin that’ll do that. I can pick up the ATIS from the speaker even when Approach is chatting with someone else in the headset. And I do a fair amount of air-to-air work that makes it nice to be able to reliably monitor two channels and toggle between them without missing a call. For that, I push “speaker” for both, so the channel I’m off is still audible overhead. The “auto” button is set for the headset.I guess I've never used one that old.
How do you monitor the SB frequency? I can monitor the other COM, but I have never heard of monitoring the SB freq. Is it a function of the radio or the audio panel? I have a PMA 6000B and MX170Bs.
Yeah. I saw that and I can find it on
https://www.faa.gov/air_traffic/publications/us_restrictions/fdc_notams/pdf/FDC4-4386_FDC6-8818.pdf
But that requires a web search for FDC 4386. And it simply brings up a couple security notices. Was simply hoping to find a way to find it via the FAA’s notam or domestic notices page. Just seems odd I can’t find it now that the NOTAM Publication has been discontinued.
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Quick question. Where can I now find the FDC NOTAM requiring guard being monitored? I used to show it to all my trainees and during flight reviews in the NOTAMS publication. But since that is discontinued, I can’t find it anywhere on an FAA website.
https://www.notams.faa.gov/dinsQueryWeb/ Click on the FDC Special Notices button and it’s like the 3rd NOTAM down on the list.
The SL40 in my plane works that way. The GTR 225s in tow planes do to. Maybe it's a Garmin thing.The ones I’ve flown that are like yours have been very rare. As in I can’t remember any but I’m not willing to say I never have because I may have forgotten.
Thanks. Yeah. I’m aware of its location in DINS. And yes I know they are the same FDC NOTAMs that civilians see, but DINS is for DOD aircrews. That’s where I show it to my civilian students. I just find it odd I can’t find it anywhere, outside of a site for DOD aircrews, since the NOTAM Publication was discontinued.
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To amplify what Half Fast said, some newer radios (such as my Trig in my gyro and many new Garmins) allow you to monitor the standby freq (to be flip-flopped) with the push of a “monitor” button. For these (at least my Trig), when there’s something being received on the active freq, the standby/monitored one is muted. That’s all a function of the radio and not the audio panel.How do you monitor the SB frequency? I can monitor the other COM, but I have never heard of monitoring the SB freq. Is it a function of the radio or the audio panel? I have a PMA 6000B and MX170Bs.
ok another option is to go to the flight service website and do a location brief. It will pull up all of the NOTAMs for that location to include all of the applicable FDCs just like it will for a normal route brief. Beyond that I got nothing.
Did the same thing when I was tooling around the Gulf of Mexico. At times I tuned up the freq that the fish spotters were on. They were mostly CE-180s with aux tanks and spent half a day out of sight of land. One was describing to another how he repaired a crack in his crank case with JB Weld. Nice tip.When I flew air ambulance and get bored around 2 or 3am, I would just flip through the frequencies. Sometimes I picked up on so very interesting conversations...
No idea. Outside the scope of my knowledge.The SL40 in my plane works that way. The GTR 225s in tow planes do to. Maybe it's a Garmin thing.
I have wondered why radios didn't have a button dedicated to monitoring 121.5. The same idea as the dedicated 1200 on some transponders.
It does it with the GNS series, too. But that is not what we were talking about. The discussion was monitoring Guard while doing routine flights.Push in and hold Com Vol button on Garmin GTN series with com and 121.5 goes into active. Maybe the same for GNS series.
Where do you guys fly that you hear all this on guard? I fly all over the SE and about all I hear is a occasional call from ATC trying to get someone over to the correct frequency.
I don't understand the meow joke. I mean on guard makes sense cause it's guard frequency and you are "on guard" . But what's the relevance of the meow joke?
Single com. Switch to 121.5 when I'm not talking to someone else.
That’s funny. We always call it Navy Common.Ah yes, Air Force common. I still tune in for the entertainment value-added and the aforementioned FAR.