jrh
Well-Known Member
Today I rode along in the back seat of a 172 while an instrument student and instructor did a flight in actual. Everything went well, except I was surprised at the instructor's *terrible* phaseology. He seemed like a really good, competent, professional instructor, but good grief, his phraseology drove me up a wall.
An example, from our clearance from ATC:
Cessna 123AB, cleared to the Reading airport via radar vectors direct HUMML, maintain 3000, departure frequency 125.15, squawk 2424.
The instructor's readback:
Cleared to Reading via HUMML, three thousand twenty-five fifteen twenty-four twenty-four one two three alpha bravo.
The rest of the flight was the same way, with nonstop slang and shortcuts. "We're at twenty-five hundred climbing three"..."turn left one eighty, three thousand and cleared for the approach"..."contact Tower nineteen nine"...
Maybe I'm too anal about this stuff, but it drove me nuts. It seemed so unclear and imprecise, especially coming from an otherwise very high quality instrument instructor.
I believe in:
Always reading full frequencies, including the "point."--"Contact Tower, one one niner point niner."
Always reading headings by individual digits, prefaced by the word "heading."--"Turn left heading one eight zero."
Always reading altitudes by thousands and hundreds--"passing two thousand five hundred climbing three thousand."
Always breaking a transmission with the word "Cessna" in the callsign for clarity...for instance, "heading one eight zero, Cessna three alpha bravo" because without the "Cessna" it sounds like "heading 1803AB" to the controller.
Never using "to" or "for" unless referring to numbers. "Climbing to four thousand"...oh, you're climbing FL240 in that little Cessna, eh?
And many other phraseology points...
I know in ATC school they're hard on the up and coming controllers about phraseology, and I wish there would be a somewhat-sort-of-remotely-close-similar standard for pilots. Somebody might argue all this slang saves time on congested frequencies, but I don't believe it. A quick, clear, sharply spit readback doesn't take any longer than all these "shortcuts," and it makes things so much more clear for everybody on frequency. It's all a matter of better radio training early on for pilots.
Am I the only one who notices this stuff? It's ok if I am. Thanks for reading my rant.
An example, from our clearance from ATC:
Cessna 123AB, cleared to the Reading airport via radar vectors direct HUMML, maintain 3000, departure frequency 125.15, squawk 2424.
The instructor's readback:
Cleared to Reading via HUMML, three thousand twenty-five fifteen twenty-four twenty-four one two three alpha bravo.
The rest of the flight was the same way, with nonstop slang and shortcuts. "We're at twenty-five hundred climbing three"..."turn left one eighty, three thousand and cleared for the approach"..."contact Tower nineteen nine"...
Maybe I'm too anal about this stuff, but it drove me nuts. It seemed so unclear and imprecise, especially coming from an otherwise very high quality instrument instructor.
I believe in:
Always reading full frequencies, including the "point."--"Contact Tower, one one niner point niner."
Always reading headings by individual digits, prefaced by the word "heading."--"Turn left heading one eight zero."
Always reading altitudes by thousands and hundreds--"passing two thousand five hundred climbing three thousand."
Always breaking a transmission with the word "Cessna" in the callsign for clarity...for instance, "heading one eight zero, Cessna three alpha bravo" because without the "Cessna" it sounds like "heading 1803AB" to the controller.
Never using "to" or "for" unless referring to numbers. "Climbing to four thousand"...oh, you're climbing FL240 in that little Cessna, eh?
And many other phraseology points...
I know in ATC school they're hard on the up and coming controllers about phraseology, and I wish there would be a somewhat-sort-of-remotely-close-similar standard for pilots. Somebody might argue all this slang saves time on congested frequencies, but I don't believe it. A quick, clear, sharply spit readback doesn't take any longer than all these "shortcuts," and it makes things so much more clear for everybody on frequency. It's all a matter of better radio training early on for pilots.
Am I the only one who notices this stuff? It's ok if I am. Thanks for reading my rant.