Hey all, I realize that many of the people here read the Red Board as well, but from the posts I see there, I feel this needs to be addressed here for those people who don't. I'm just going to paste a post I just wrote over there. The entire thread is here for those who can access it. http://forums.aopa.org/showthread.php?p=213482#poststop
BTW to keep everything in context, The radio terms Mayday, Pan-pan (the call pronunciation is pahn-pahn repeated three times) and Security (pro. Say-cure-i-tay) are all agreed and standardized by international convention to which the US is a signator. Now, here's the post:
BTW to keep everything in context, The radio terms Mayday, Pan-pan (the call pronunciation is pahn-pahn repeated three times) and Security (pro. Say-cure-i-tay) are all agreed and standardized by international convention to which the US is a signator. Now, here's the post:
fholbert said:It's an emergency or nothing at all. Why would anyone use PAN?
Wow, I don't get this, didn't you get taught any of this? Don't you read up on this kind of stuff? It's in the AIM. Pahn-Pahn is a "Standby to render assistance" call. To give someone a heads up that a situation may develope which will require immediate resource allocation. The calls go out to put the chopper on standby, call an ambulance to meet you if you have a medical situation that isn't "imminent loss of life or property" but critcal none the less. If I have an engine out, but I'm maintaining altitude 15kts above blue line and the failure wasn't a fuel related failure. That is not a Mayday, there is no reason to declare an emergency but it's not "nothing at all". Pan-Pan Pan-Pan Pan-Pan is how you should start that call. If you are in a country where your language is the native language, you can probably dispose of that, however there are some countries that take radio protocol very seriously and improper protocol is taken as a personal insult to the person with whom you are speaking. This is really part of the crap that gives Americans a bad name around the world, we don't follow rules we agree to and it is viewed as arrogance. I spend half my life around the world having to defend Americans explaining that Americans aren't bad and evil, they're just either stupid or ignorant and don't realize that they are insulting you.
I find it amazing that in a thread about normal ATC coms, there is a great furor and uproar about doing it exactly right, and this is when the consequences from a miscomunication are relatively low, that such a laxadazical attitude when it comes to a call you have to make when, by the situation requiring the call, the stakes are elevated.
This is basic airmanship 101. You don't have to like it, you don't have to understand it, you just have to recognize what it is and what it means and act accordingly. I don't care if you use it or not, but when you hear me call Pahn-Pahn Pahn-Pahn Pahn-Pahn, I do expect you to know what that means and if you are in a position to help me out, need to pay attention and listen up to the traffic and give your position/track. Check your position against mine and figure out the intercept for current and progressive positions. Don't take any action, keep on your way. In five minutes when I escalate the call to Mayday Mayday Mayday You better turn your butt immediately in the direction you already had figured and get the nose down if you're high, give me a call with an ETA to position. I expect nothing less of you because I expect nothing less of me. In case you don't realize it, this is what you signed on for when you signed your Airman's Certificate. Me personnally, If I can stick the plane in near you without getting killed myself, I will. If you made the Pan Pan Pan call 5 minutes before you had to make the Mayday, it probably took 3-4 minutes off the time it took for me to get to you, much more if you called Pahn-Pahn Pahn-Pahn Pahn-Pahn, because I'm the kinda a guy who'll come over and form up on you till you're squared away so when you go in I'm there and the helo is already off the ground. Just doing my part for Darwin, you show me you're on the ball, I go further to help. (You prove yourself unworthy, I'll do what I'm required.) You and your passengers all lived because of the time saved by making that Pan-Pan call. You're situation may not always allow for a Pan Pan call. sometimes things just happen and it's all on you now, you have a Mayday right off the bat. There are situations though where things are starting to go wrong, you don't like it, but it's under control...This is the time you call Pan Pan. Give them a heads up that a situation may be developing, and while you're distracted trying to square away your issues, ATC calls you and queries your course or altitude change. This is because (s)he's watching out for you, realizes you may be head down under the panel trying to fix the plane and they clue you in to the fact that you need to pay attention to the airplane now. If you didn't call they wouldn't have known to tell you. If you square everything away and sort it all out you just give em a call back "Houston Center, 04Y cancel Pan Pan and thank you."
Sheesh, and to think I made my mate needle gun an entire engine room stack for saying "Security" instead of "Say-cure-i-tay".
So, have I sufficiently answered the question:
Are you squared away? I hope so...fholbert said:Why would anyone use PAN?
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