I have an 9 year old cockpit card from the King school that list Air-to-Air Freq as 122.75 and 122.85.
22.85 went away a few years ago. It's no longer listed.
I have an 9 year old cockpit card from the King school that list Air-to-Air Freq as 122.75 and 122.85.
I guess I need a new card!!!22.85 went away a few years ago. It's no longer listed.
We've always used 123.45
The airline guys were blowing up 121.5 last night trying to get the score to the Cubs Indians game.
Not to be argumentative here Greg but where is is written that it is "illegal" to broadcast on 123.45? To be clear, I've broadcast on that frequency on two flights and less than 5 or 6 transmissions on each. Do the oceanic flights interfere with the flight tests because they're on the same frequency? Who are the testing facilities that use that frequency? If it is jammed or being used by an oceanic flight do they have a backup or do they scrub the mission? Or is it "illegal" in the sense that asking what the score or the Cubs Indians game is on an emergency frequency is "illegal?"
Saying that something is illegal is not the same as saying that it's necessarily a big deal. The latter depends on the circumstances.Got no problem using 22.75 either but I'm curious, who yelled at you and what did they say?
You know the pilot/forum community is funny. We admittedly defend our position on what we think is illegal or frowned upon or may endanger someone else yet we think nothing at all of breaking the posted speed limit on the road. Just an observation of which I'm just as guilty as the next guy.
Saying that something is illegal is not the same as saying that it's necessarily a big deal. The latter depends on the circumstances.
mostly hillbillies talking trash about Bama fans which I was cool with.QUOTE]
I'm gonna call DG and have him straighten your arse out!
In my line of work violating the FCC Rules is a bad idea (sitting in an EMC standards committee meeting in Hangzhou China as I type this). FCC Rules are easy to follow, why be difficult?
What needs to be done to get a "POA Frequency" for when I fly and am bored and want to tell jokes in the air or just chit chat? You know, like truckers have channel 16. One that doesn't yell "your on guard" and allows friendly conversation.
...In my neck of the woods it belongs to Boeing, and they do not appreciate it being usurped by folks who are not authorized to use it.
Bob Gardner
Yeah, like using cell phones in flight....such a horrible idea...
Let's get real. Incorrectly using 123.45 is about on the same level as someone making a phone call from a GA airplane.
Yeah, like using cell phones in flight....such a horrible idea...
Let's get real. Incorrectly using 123.45 is about on the same level as someone making a phone call from a GA airplane.
We need a chat room on POA so I can watch all the feuding of POA live!
No kidding.You want a POA frequency, and you believe that it will be "friendly"? Ha, ha! Take a look at most of the question threads around here and see how they end up.
Who made "radioreference.com LLC" an authoritative source?
I'll keep that in mind next time we get stepped onLet's get real. Incorrectly using 123.45 is about on the same level as someone making a phone call from a GA airplane.
If a pilot can't apply some common sense, i.e. Listen before speaking on a radio, that is a whole 'nother story...I'll keep that in mind next time we get stepped on
Nauga,
who says, "Don't tread on me."
I don't use 123.45 myself, nor do I recommend that others use it.In my line of work violating the FCC Rules is a bad idea (sitting in an EMC standards committee meeting in Hangzhou China as I type this). FCC Rules are easy to follow, why be difficult?
Sorry that you didn't get the answer that you wanted.The same people who believes every comment made here an "authoritative source".
Some people here don't bother to read the entire thread. They read down to something they don't agree with or feel they can prove wrong and fire up the fingertips and blast away. Maybe I should add that to the pet peeve thread. I'm outa this one.
Tim, you can be assured that if I ever dial up that frequency and I hear someone talking about a test flight or discussing parameters or something such as that, I would never broadcast on the frequency in the first place. K? (I'm not the idiot who tried to kill you at Gastons) I've never been accused of "yapping away" on frequency or normal conversation. Around here in Southern Arizona, I've never heard anyone on the frequency at all.
I'm sure testing centers have back up frequencies that they use just in case they need to "make an emergency call to their base." There's really no need to be overly dramatic about this issue. By the way, Boeing doesn't use the frequency. I don't know who Levy is but if it is truly "illegal" to broadcast on 123.45, then a document expressing that fact shouldn't be so hard to find.
bottom line - going for education here, not confrontation.
The same people who believes every comment made here an "authoritative source".
Some people here don't bother to read the entire thread. They read down to something they don't agree with or feel they can prove wrong and fire up the fingertips and blast away. Maybe I should add that to the pet peeve thread. I'm outa this one.
Ohhhh freq out!
The same people who believes every comment made here an "authoritative source".
Some people here don't bother to read the entire thread. They read down to something they don't agree with or feel they can prove wrong and fire up the fingertips and blast away. Maybe I should add that to the pet peeve thread. I'm outa this one.
Some people here don't bother to read the entire thread. They read down to something they don't agree with or feel they can prove wrong and fire up the fingertips and blast away.
I've talked hundreds of miles with just a small radio sitting on the passenger seat.
Actually, no. LOL. Anything that puts out a watt or two will work on 2 meters, as long as you can find a noise cancelling headset to plug into it...Recommendation for a radio?
If you want to chit-chat, get an amateur radio license...it's relatively easy to get these days, and you can chit-chat all day on nearly an unlimited number of frequencies. I do it often while flying, actually.
When you're on the air while in the air, your VHF/UHF range is expanded greatly. I've talked hundreds of miles with just a small radio sitting on the passenger seat.
Now what I'd be interested in, is a POA 2 meter frequency!
Actually, no. LOL. Anything that puts out a watt or two will work on 2 meters, as long as you can find a noise cancelling headset to plug into it...
I've seen people that come up with ways to plug it into their avionic panels on experimental aircraft and use their flying headsets, but since I fly certified aircraft, I don't do that. Fortunately, my aircraft is on the quiet side, so I just put the aviation radios on "speaker", and then put the 2 meter headset on covering only my left ear, leaving my right ear uncovered to listen to the speaker (if necessary).