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Airline Pilot/Flight Engineer

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AVG. SALARY

$120,250

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EDUCATION

Bachelor's degree or higher +

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JOB OUTLOOK

Decreasing

Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Communication

Communication between pilots and the air traffic controllers is absolutely critical to a safe flight. To make sure everybody understands what is being said, a standard terminology is always used. And it's mandatory to double-check procedures.

For example, if the controller says, "climb and maintain 12,000," the pilot repeats back, "climb and maintain 12,000."

The system is meant to eliminate confusion and save lives.

One tragic example of a failure to communicate was a Korean Air jet that crashed in 1997. The controllers were saying one thing, and the pilots were repeating back another.

It's clear that communication problems played a part in the crash. Mechanical failure was another factor.

You're a pilot. You know that there are accepted patterns of communication that must be strictly followed. The basic guidelines for initial contact are:

  1. Give the name of the facility being called, plus the word radio
  2. Give your full aircraft identification
  3. Identify the type of message to follow
  4. Say the word "over" at end of communication

Now that you have the structure, here's the situation:

  • You are flying your small prop-engine Arrow airplane. There is just yourself and one passenger on-board. It is not a commuter flight.
  • You are six miles away from your destination airport, and you need to know what the air traffic is like. This is important because you need to know if you can fly right in, or if you should slow down or circle for a while before making your final approach.
  • You open the radio channel to make contact with the Phoenix Tower. Create a message to the air traffic control tower using the following information:
    • You are calling Phoenix Tower.
    • Your plane is called Arrow fcrf.
    • Pilots and control towers use the phonetic alphabet when spelling out letters. Therefore, A B C D E turns into Alpha, Bravo, Charlie, Delta, Echo.... An aircraft registered as FCRF would become "Foxtrot Charlie Romeo Foxtrot" on the radio.
    • You need traffic advisory information to land.

Here's the conversation. Fill in your side:

You:

Tower: "Arrow fcrf Phoenix radio go ahead."

You:

Tower: "crf altimeter is 29.91 wind is 170 at 8 active runway is 16 we have 3 in the circuit report joining will report joining crf."

You:

"On the first call to the tower, pilots must fully identify themselves," says flight instructor Russell Yuen. "Therefore, they have to introduce themselves as 'Foxtrot Charlie Romeo Foxtrot.' After initial call is made, we can drop the first letter. It's kind of like human conversation, when you are introducing yourself to someone, you might say, 'Hi, I am Joe Smith.' After initial conversation, your friend will start calling you Joe."

Contact

  • Email Support

  • 1-800-GO-TO-XAP (1-800-468-6927)
    From outside the U.S., please call +1 (424) 750-3900

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