121.5

Where did the term ‘Guard’ come from in reference to 121.5?

We always monitored it on the ship, but it was referred to as IAD and MAD (International Air Distress 121.5/Military Air Distress 243.0)
 
"Guard" because all stations were required to keep a watch on it.
 
No way. We can’t afford VHF. It’s cheerleader or Winchester for us.
Us either. 243.0 has always been navy common. I always found myself on cheapsuit, full house or rifle although cheerleader is a favorite also.
 
Quick question. Where can I now find the FDC NOTAM requiring guard being monitored? I used to show it to all my trainees and during flight reviews in the NOTAMS publication. But since that is discontinued, I can’t find it anywhere on an FAA website.


Yeah. I saw that and I can find it on

https://www.faa.gov/air_traffic/publications/us_restrictions/fdc_notams/pdf/FDC4-4386_FDC6-8818.pdf

But that requires a web search for FDC 4386. And it simply brings up a couple security notices. Was simply hoping to find a way to find it via the FAA’s notam or domestic notices page. Just seems odd I can’t find it now that the NOTAM Publication has been discontinued.

https://www.notams.faa.gov/dinsQueryWeb/ Click on the FDC Special Notices button and it’s like the 3rd NOTAM down on the list.

Thanks. Yeah. I’m aware of its location in DINS. And yes I know they are the same FDC NOTAMs that civilians see, but DINS is for DOD aircrews. That’s where I show it to my civilian students. I just find it odd I can’t find it anywhere, outside of a site for DOD aircrews, since the NOTAM Publication was discontinued.

ok another option is to go to the flight service website and do a location brief. It will pull up all of the NOTAMs for that location to include all of the applicable FDCs just like it will for a normal route brief. Beyond that I got nothing.

That will have to do. Thanks!

When I Googled "faa notams" this is the first thing that came up:

https://notams.aim.faa.gov/notamSearch/nsapp.html#/

After poking around there for a while, I figured out how to find it:

Open the dropdown at the upper left and select Predefined Queries.
Select the button that says FDC Special Notices.
Select the Search button.
The 121.5 NOTAM is at the top of a long list.​

Here's an alternate procedure:

Leave the dropdown on the default choice, which is "Location."
In the box to the right of that, type "fdc" and select Search.
Open the Filters dropdown, click on Procedure, select the SPECIAL checkbox, and select the Apply button.
The 121.5 NOTAM is at the top of a much shorter list.
The Flight Service page mentioned previously is probably better for someone who doesn't already know about this NOTAM.
 
Us either. 243.0 has always been navy common. I always found myself on cheapsuit, full house or rifle although cheerleader is a favorite also.
I've got pretty good guesses on cheerleader (246.8), rifle (300.6) and full house (335.55), but I'm drawing a blank on cheap suit.
 
I've got pretty good guesses on cheerleader (246.8), rifle (300.6) and full house (335.55), but I'm drawing a blank on cheap suit.
299.5

Nauga,
and Eddie, who might be kidding
 
Not much to add for whats already been said. I do monitor Guard if I have 2 coms. Pilots in SE AK give position reports on 122.9, that is what I monitor and report on during a flight.
 
Thanks palmpilot, those worked perfectly!!!


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Not too much, not with just two radios in busy airspace - talking on one, ATIS/AWOS etc. on the other, or setting up for hand offs. . .IF CAPABLE, SHALL MAINTAIN A LISTENING WATCH ON VHF GUARD 121.5. In busy environments I judge my aircraft is not capable.
 
A week or two ago I maintained a listening watch on 121.5 and as I was approaching the airport I heard an ELT. It was a few minutes past the hour so I figured it to be someone testing. Later that night, I found out someone had actually crashed. I felt bad that I didn't report it but am glad someone else apparently did. Next time, I'm going to listen longer and be more diligent about reporting it if it persists.
 
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