why does this guy speak like you hear on airplane radio
why does this guy speak like you hear on airplane radio
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saaby93

Original Poster:

32,038 posts

201 months

Thursday 30th June 2022
quotequote all
Even when speaking normally he sounds like what you'd exect over the airwaves
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JHQ8UAjoVVc
smile

great flying though yes


Edited by saaby93 on Thursday 30th June 19:34

this is my username

386 posts

83 months

Thursday 30th June 2022
quotequote all
Because he's in his aeroplane in "work" mode?

But seriously, I often ask my family to "standby" if I can't answer something straight away .....

48k

16,304 posts

171 months

Thursday 30th June 2022
quotequote all
saaby93 said:
Even when speaking normally he sounds like what you'd exect over the airwaves
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JHQ8UAjoVVc
smile

great flying though yes


Edited by saaby93 on Thursday 30th June 19:34
I've been a fan of that channel for a long time. Ryan is currently back in America but he saved about a year of footage and is still uploading vids to YT regularly. Fantastic scenery and superb flying whether he's on his own or training a new pilot. It's really good to listen to his thought processes in the air and understand some of the challenges of bush flying that you don't think about / take for granted in "normal" flying.

djc206

13,400 posts

148 months

Thursday 30th June 2022
quotequote all
this is my username said:
Because he's in his aeroplane in "work" mode?

But seriously, I often ask my family to "standby" if I can't answer something straight away .....
Standby, say again, wilco, negative, affirm, roger. Rattling things off in the phonetic alphabet so quickly that normal people just don’t understand and you’d have been better off saying Q for cucumber like they did on Wheel of Fortune. Bonus points for day-cimal, tree, niner or fife.

If we had a radiotelephony jar like some people have swear jars in our house we wouldn’t need a mortgage which is pretty tragic but hey, it’s an efficient form of communication. Can’t wait to get CPDLC implants….

eharding

14,648 posts

307 months

Thursday 30th June 2022
quotequote all
djc206 said:
this is my username said:
Because he's in his aeroplane in "work" mode?

But seriously, I often ask my family to "standby" if I can't answer something straight away .....
Standby, say again, wilco, negative, affirm, roger. Rattling things off in the phonetic alphabet so quickly that normal people just don’t understand and you’d have been better off saying Q for cucumber like they did on Wheel of Fortune. Bonus points for day-cimal, tree, niner or fife.

If we had a radiotelephony jar like some people have swear jars in our house we wouldn’t need a mortgage which is pretty tragic but hey, it’s an efficient form of communication. Can’t wait to get CPDLC implants….
Does your voice go up an involuntary octave when you're discussing the May Day bank holiday or which of the three pans you have in the cupboard you're going to cook with though?

(I've only ever made on Pan call for real - fuel tank split in the Pitts and started leaking onto my legs - but did make an effort not to sound like I was on helium over the radio before shutting the electrics down. Would also have made a second one a few years later when it turned out a mate's fuel totaliser did nothing of the sort and he was having problems coming to terms with the situation, but my side didn't have a transmit switch...)


ben5575

7,258 posts

244 months

Thursday 30th June 2022
quotequote all
djc206 said:
Standby, say again, wilco, negative, affirm, roger. Rattling things off in the phonetic alphabet so quickly that normal people just don’t understand and you’d have been better off saying Q for cucumber like they did on Wheel of Fortune. Bonus points for day-cimal, tree, niner or fife.

If we had a radiotelephony jar like some people have swear jars in our house we wouldn’t need a mortgage which is pretty tragic but hey, it’s an efficient form of communication. Can’t wait to get CPDLC implants….
biggrin See also ‘you have control … I have control’

djc206

13,400 posts

148 months

Thursday 30th June 2022
quotequote all
eharding said:
Does your voice go up an involuntary octave when you're discussing the May Day bank holiday or which of the three pans you have in the cupboard you're going to cook with though?

(I've only ever made on Pan call for real - fuel tank split in the Pitts and started leaking onto my legs - but did make an effort not to sound like I was on helium over the radio before shutting the electrics down. Would also have made a second one a few years later when it turned out a mate's fuel totaliser did nothing of the sort and he was having problems coming to terms with the situation, but my side didn't have a transmit switch...)
Ha fortunately not, mostly because I’m on the other end of radio with my feet on terra firma. I reckon a good number of my grey hairs are related to the two words though.

eharding

14,648 posts

307 months

Friday 1st July 2022
quotequote all
djc206 said:
eharding said:
Does your voice go up an involuntary octave when you're discussing the May Day bank holiday or which of the three pans you have in the cupboard you're going to cook with though?

(I've only ever made on Pan call for real - fuel tank split in the Pitts and started leaking onto my legs - but did make an effort not to sound like I was on helium over the radio before shutting the electrics down. Would also have made a second one a few years later when it turned out a mate's fuel totaliser did nothing of the sort and he was having problems coming to terms with the situation, but my side didn't have a transmit switch...)
Ha fortunately not, mostly because I’m on the other end of radio with my feet on terra firma. I reckon a good number of my grey hairs are related to the two words though.
Ah! - Have you tried applying the "Remain clear of controlled kitchenspace, unable of offer washing up service due to controller workload" gambit in a domestic setting yet?

Chuck328

1,629 posts

190 months

Friday 1st July 2022
quotequote all
eharding said:
djc206 said:
eharding said:
Does your voice go up an involuntary octave when you're discussing the May Day bank holiday or which of the three pans you have in the cupboard you're going to cook with though?

(I've only ever made on Pan call for real - fuel tank split in the Pitts and started leaking onto my legs - but did make an effort not to sound like I was on helium over the radio before shutting the electrics down. Would also have made a second one a few years later when it turned out a mate's fuel totaliser did nothing of the sort and he was having problems coming to terms with the situation, but my side didn't have a transmit switch...)
Ha fortunately not, mostly because I’m on the other end of radio with my feet on terra firma. I reckon a good number of my grey hairs are related to the two words though.
Ah! - Have you tried applying the "Remain clear of controlled kitchenspace, unable of offer washing up service due to controller workload" gambit in a domestic setting yet?
Careful, he's going to need to offer himself a deconfliction service from the wife if he tries that malarkey.

48k

16,304 posts

171 months

Friday 1st July 2022
quotequote all
Chuck328 said:
eharding said:
djc206 said:
eharding said:
Does your voice go up an involuntary octave when you're discussing the May Day bank holiday or which of the three pans you have in the cupboard you're going to cook with though?

(I've only ever made on Pan call for real - fuel tank split in the Pitts and started leaking onto my legs - but did make an effort not to sound like I was on helium over the radio before shutting the electrics down. Would also have made a second one a few years later when it turned out a mate's fuel totaliser did nothing of the sort and he was having problems coming to terms with the situation, but my side didn't have a transmit switch...)
Ha fortunately not, mostly because I’m on the other end of radio with my feet on terra firma. I reckon a good number of my grey hairs are related to the two words though.
Ah! - Have you tried applying the "Remain clear of controlled kitchenspace, unable of offer washing up service due to controller workload" gambit in a domestic setting yet?
Careful, he's going to need to offer himself a deconfliction service from the wife if he tries that malarkey.
Yeah if he tries that there's no chance of getting a zone transit at Brest.

djc206

13,400 posts

148 months

Friday 1st July 2022
quotequote all
Chuck328 said:
Careful, he's going to need to offer himself a deconfliction service from the wife if he tries that malarkey.
We’ve been together for 10 years. It’s a basic service all the way now.

djc206

13,400 posts

148 months

Friday 1st July 2022
quotequote all
eharding said:
Ah! - Have you tried applying the "Remain clear of controlled kitchenspace, unable of offer washing up service due to controller workload" gambit in a domestic setting yet?
I would be under our veg patch if I did

saaby93

Original Poster:

32,038 posts

201 months

Friday 1st July 2022
quotequote all
ben5575 said:
biggrin See also ‘you have control … I have control’
It's surprising how wide spread that's become spin
I was on a city guided tour where the two guides used it at various stages to decide who was in control of the group and who was acting as sheep dog at the back (not in airplane voice though - tally ho, bandits etc)

anonymous-user

77 months

Friday 1st July 2022
quotequote all
What a great video, really enjoyed it. Love the way it’s made and mixed with charts etc. thanks for posting.

He speaks like that as he’s verbalising a lot of his checklists and procedures and his thought process As A) he’s on his own and to make sure he hasn’t missed anything and B) So the viewer knows what’s going on.

The way he speaks seems completely normal to me, in an aircraft anyway.

I sometimes do this at home or in the car, asking for the “shutdown checklist” after parking and announcing “brake set”. My daughter generally just adds random items like

crisp packet. . . Abandoned
thanks for the lift. . .not required

Etc

I used to do warning messages like gpws when my wife was about to get stroppy like “warning sense of humour failure imminent” but I found it tended to make the situation worse and often resulted in less than optimal outcomes.

Edited by anonymous-user on Friday 1st July 08:40