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Posted
Fox is a brevity code used by NATO pilots...

Brevity codes are designed to convey complex information with a few words. Using the codes eases coordination and improves understanding during multiservice operations.

Clear now?

Posted (edited)

edit: M2 posted exactly what I said

Edited by TheWolf424
Posted

Nope... I get why we say the word... where did it originate? Is it some type of acronym or did it stem from some other use of the word? I have thoroughly studied both of those pages and countless others in the past couple days - im looking for the hard to find stuff here.

Posted
Nope... I get why we say the word... where did it originate? Is it some type of acronym or did it stem from some other use of the word? I have thoroughly studied both of those pages and countless others in the past couple days - im looking for the hard to find stuff here.

I doubt it's an acronym, considering we use terms like "No Joy", "Tally", "Ziplip", etc. and I highly doubt those are acronyms. Probably just some Col that needed that final bullet to get his star.

Posted
Nope... I get why we say the word... where did it originate? Is it some type of acronym or did it stem from some other use of the word? I have thoroughly studied both of those pages and countless others in the past couple days - im looking for the hard to find stuff here.

Listen closely...they are brevity codes! Terms that are easier to use and are universally understood. Why the term 'Fox' is used to indicate simulated/actual launch of air-to-air weapons is not known, as are all the others (e.g. 'Chicks' for friendly aircraft, etc).

Same goes with the NATO nomenclatures for Russian/former Soviet Union hardware, i.e. FULCRUM, FLANKER, etc. other than they all began with the letter 'F' and were fighters (as were bombers began with 'B,' cargo aircraft 'C' and helicopter 'H'). Why those specific names were picked is unknown.

Don't strain your brain in trying to figure out the logic behind this stuff!

Posted

Yoke monkey - pilot

Stick actuator - pilot

Flight control actuator - pilot

Meat servo - pilot

Voice-actuated autopilot - pilot

Side-sitting switch bitch - flight engineer

Wrench bender - mechanic

Tin bender - sheetmetal specialist / metalsmith

Bubble chaser - hydraulics specialist

Tweak - avionics specialist

Tron chaser - avionics specialist

Posted

A couple off the top of my head, some exclusive to the rotary-wing world.

"Rotorhead" - Helo Pilot

FE - Flight Engineer

PJ - Pararescueman

ETL - Effective Translational Lift

LTE - Loss of Tailrotor Effectiveness

EP - Emergency Procedure

"Auto" - Autorotation

GK - General Knowledge

Fun fun! I'll have to think of a few more. :thumbsup:

Posted

PIO - Pilot Induced Oscillations

PIS - Pilot Induced Shittiness

Posted

FCP - Front Cockpit or Front Cockpit Pilot

RCP - Rear Cockpit

IP - Instructor Pilot

SP - Student Pilot

CS - Callsign

TOT - Take-Off Time or Time Over Target

Chock Time - when the aircraft has to be shut down (usually misspelled as "Chalk")

Z - Zulu time, similar to Greenwich Mean Time

CT - continuation training (all instructors / no students)

Pattern terminology:

Norm - normal pattern

NF - No-Flap pattern / landing

GA - Go-Around

BO - Break Out

ELP - Emergency Landing Pattern

Formation terminology:

XU - crossunder

RJ - rejoin

BO - breakout

ET L3 - extended trail level 3

CT - close trail

ECH - echelon turn

WW - wingwork

PO - pitchout

MOA - Military Operations Area

STAR - Standard Terminal ARrival

FLIP - FLight Information Publication (?)

TCN - Terminal Change Notice (update to the FLIP)

SR - Slow Route

VR - Vis Route

IR - Instrument Route

...all very useful in filling out an SUPT lineup card!

Posted
Chock Time - when the aircraft has to be shut down (usually misspelled as "Chalk")

Chock - A block of wood, rubber, or plastic that is placed in front of and behind a tire or tires, to keep an aircraft/vehicle from rolling.

Chalk - The personnel and equipment that make up a single load of an aircraft/vehicle.

* Note - "chalk" is an Army & Air Force term. The Navy & Marines use the term "stick".

Posted

Well it seems a little pilot centric in here... ("and the nomination for Understatement of the year...")

A few non-pilot, but aircrew acronyms:

SN: Student Navigator

IN: Instructor Navigator

EN: Evaluator Navigator (an instructor of an IN; also handles checkrides)

EWO: Electronic Warfare Officer (usually jabbers on interphone incessantly, but when he mentions a missile launch, his voice suddenly becomes God's...)

TOT: Time on target

ATCAA: Air Traffic Control Advisory Area (an area, usually above a MOA, that is sometimes used by military aircraft)

SWAG: Scientific Wild Ass Guess

WWLMD: What would LeMay Do?

Falcon 232: Pardon me, Nav. But if it's not too much trouble would you mind telling us where the f*** we are?!?!

see https://tailspinstales.blogspot.com/2007/08/faclon-codes.html for more Falcon codes

  • 1 year later...
Posted (edited)

One last story:

When I was flying C-130Es at the schoolhouse, we had to do an ERO for student training. Our ERO block was on the back end of our line, so it made sense to just do it in parking prior to shutting down. We had even gotten an overfly, so when we taxied to park, we were the only Herk with engines still running. When the Nav made the 30 minute out call, he had requested ATOC support for the ERO.

We pulled into parking and the loads stated there was no K-loader in sight, so we called CP again and asked if ATOC was on the way. They said they made the initial call but would check. A few minutes later, CP called back and stated that ATOC was "MOG'd out". My reply was "What's their MOG? Zero?" CP stated "sorry sir, they said they are swamped and too busy to support". Amazing. We're the only airplane with engines running...everyone else had shut down and gone home for the night, and we were the only aircraft in our ERO block to be scheduled with ATOC for an ERO...yet they were "MOG'd out". Interesting.

And the opportunity to learn shows itself! I love baseops for this...

The irony is not lost on me that a CAF guy was out acronym'd by a MAF guy... And the reaction you had BQZip was exactly how 90% of the MAF guys react when it happens - "does not compute = not important to me = scoff." CAF guys talk like this all the time, leaving their MAF bros in the dust during briefings, standups, integration exercises, etc. Ive seen CAF GO's stop a briefing because the dude on stage was out-abbreviating the leadership. Hilarious, but also lame.

Good lesson on know your audience - its tough to not talk down to one ground and not pander to another.

ERO - Engine Running Offload

CP - Command Post

MOG - Max on Ground (a factor in how much cargo can be downloaded and processed at the same time, but also of physical ramps space - i.e. MOG is different for C-5s and C-130s)

ATOC - Air Terminal Operations Center - the AMC guys who do cargo transfer

Chuck

Edited by Chuck17
Posted

My bad, but as pointed out before, I'm not the first to throw out acronyms that confused! I manage to learn something when you CAF dudes fling acronyms around...here's your chance!

If I throw an acronym out there that isn't common knowledge, I almost always provide a translation. I also take the time to learn what acronyms are before using them:

How many of you know what these acronyms stand for (not just what they are) without looking them up:

Medical:MRI

Military:CALCM

Biology:DNA

Football:PAT

Military:AWACS

Military:ALICE

Military:LNO

Military:HMMWV

Military:MOLLE

Military:MOPP

Military:SCIF

Military:JDAM

You'll probably get a few.

Short version, we're all guilty of it. Just spell them out if they aren't 100% clear.

  • Downvote 1

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