What does Charlie mean in airport?

Class Charlie (also referred to as "Class C") Airspace areas are designed to improve aviation safety by reducing the risk of midair collisions in the terminal area and enhance the management of air traffic operations therein.
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What does Charlie mean in aviation?

Charlie-Charlie is a fancy substitution for a standard affirmative and accepted non-standard words roger and wilco. Standard phraseology is meant to prevent confusion, and has been improved after incidents/accidents where the communication between parties played a role.
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What is Bravo and Charlie airspace?

For European pilots who may not be familiar with the terms “Class Bravo” or “Class Charlie” airspace, Class Bravo (or Class B) is the American term for airspace from the surface to 10,000 feet that is normally found around the busiest and most congested airports (roughly 12 airports) while Class Charlie (or Class C) is ...
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How big is Charlie airspace?

The inner ring of Class C airspace typically extends from the surface to 4,000' above the airport, and has a radius of 5NM. The outer ring of Class C airspace typically extends from 1,200' above the airport to 4,000' above the airport, and has a radius of 10NM.
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What does Alpha Bravo Charlie Delta mean in aviation?

The NATO phonetic alphabet is a Spelling Alphabet, a set of words used instead of letters in oral communication (i.e. over the phone or military radio). Each word ("code word") stands for its initial letter (alphabetical "symbol").
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What is the NATO Phonetic Alphabet? Alpha, Bravo, Charlie, Delta....



What is Charlie military code?

THREATCON CHARLIE: (Threat level high) This condition applies when an incident occurs or intelligence is received indicating some form of terrorist action against personnel and facilities is imminent.
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What does Romeo mean in flight?

"Romeo" refers to the letter R (ICAO phonetic alphabet) and is short for WCHR which is an aviation-typical abbreviation for "Wheel chair to Ramp".
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What does Bravo mean in flying?

A Bravo is generally that airspace from the surface to 10,000 feet MSL surrounding the nation's busiest airports.
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What are the 7 classifications of airspace?

There are two categories of airspace or airspace areas: Regulatory (Class A, B, C, D, and E airspace areas, restricted and prohibited areas). Nonregulatory (military operations areas [MOA], warning areas, alert areas, controlled firing areas [CFA], and national security areas [NSA]).
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Who controls airspace over oceans?

The FAA is a year-round, 24/7 operation, responsible for 5.3 million square miles of U.S. domestic airspace and 24 million square miles of U.S. airspace over the oceans. There are 43,290 average daily flights in and out of the U.S.
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What does Bravo Tango Charlie mean?

The phonetic alphabet is often used by military and civilians to communicate error-free spelling or messages over the phone. For example, Alpha for “A”, Bravo for “B”, and Charlie for “C”. Additionally, IRDS can be used to relay military code, slang, or shortcode.
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What does tango mean in aviation?

New satnav routes pay off for GA pilots. March 5, 2009. OPA's multi-year bid for RNAV terminal transition routes, also referred to as tango or T-routes, is beginning to pay big dividends for the general aviation community.
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What does golf mean in aviation?

GOLF. Go Juice – sounds like it's from a comic book, but it just means, “fuel”. Goo – cloudy or raining weather that obstructs vision (see “IMC”.)
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Why do pilots say Roger?

The International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) officially defines the word "roger" to mean "I have received all of your transmission." For example, a pilot would say "roger" in response to an advisory from Air Traffic Control.
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Why do pilots say Niner?

Aviators often speak “pilot English” to avoid miscommunications over radio transmission. “Tree” for instance, means three, “fife” is the number five and “niner” means nine, says Tom Zecha, a manager at AOPA. The variations stemmed from a desire to avoid confusion between similar-sounding numbers, he says.
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How do you greet a pilot?

Ladies and gentlemen, good morning / afternoon / evening. Welcome on board (flight reference). This is Captain / Co-pilot (your name) speaking and I have some information about our flight.
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Why is there no F airspace?

Where available, ATC may give separation guidance to IFR aircraft. In short, the real purpose of Class F is to allow flights to remain IFR in uncontrolled environments. Since this is a sort of mix between Class E and Class G airspace, there is no Class F inside the United States.
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What are the 4 types of airspace?

The two categories of airspace are: regulatory and nonregulatory. Within these two categories, there are four types: controlled, uncontrolled, special use, and other airspace.
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What is class E and G airspace?

Class E is used for airspace between usually 2,500 ft (760 m) AGL (around airports 1,000 ft (300 m) or 1,700 ft (520 m) AGL) and FL 100. Class F is not used. Class G is used below 2,500 ft (760 m) AGL (around airports below 1,000 ft (300 m) AGL, then rises via a step at 1,700 ft (520 m) to 2,500 ft (760 m) AGL).
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What does Zulu mean in aviation?

Zulu time, used in aviation quite often, is another name for UTC (Coordinated Universal Time (French: temps universel coordonné)). It is the primary time standard by which the world regulates clocks and time. It is, within about 1 second, mean solar time at 0° longitude; it does not observe daylight saving time.
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How do pilots say numbers?

Pilots mostly pronounce numbers as in regular English but with a few exceptions. Zero (0) is always “zero,” not “oh.” Three (3) becomes “tree.” Five (5) becomes “fife.” Nine (9) becomes “niner.”
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What are the dirty dozen airports?

Here's the list of the "No Student Pilot" airports from the Aeronautical Information Manual, as of April 2014:
  • Andrews Air Force Base, MD.
  • Atlanta Hartsfield Airport, GA.
  • Boston Logan Airport, MA.
  • Chicago O'Hare Int'l Airport, IL.
  • Dallas/Fort Worth Int'l Airport, TX.
  • Los Angeles Int'l Airport, CA.
  • Miami Int'l Airport, FL.
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What does pumpkin mean in aviation?

I'm ready to fly my last leg and running late. That leg is blocked at 2 hours even. If I started my day at 0600, I turn into a pumpkin at 2200. That means my two hour long flight must cross the hold short line no later than 1959.
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Why do pilots say heavier?

The word "heavy" means a larger aircraft type, with a Maximum Takeoff Weight of 160 tonnes or more. These aircraft create wake turbulence from their wings and require extra separation between following aircraft, and the use of "heavy" reminds other pilots of that fact.
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Why do they say Niner instead of nine?

Changing “nine” to “niner” adds another vowel sound, which may help distinguish them when radio reception is poor. Show activity on this post. "Niner" is spoken for the numeral 9 to avoid it being mistaken for 5. This would be better as a comment once you gain enough reputation.
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