Originally Posted by DutyofCare
(Post 9737134)
Hey AerialPerspective Guru / in the know & No Crap Master :ok:
Who is running under the Callsign TEGOS pls :confused: Is it of any fact, AQZ are running TT flts ex MML :confused: |
TiggOz is Tigerair's new call sign since October last year. It has replaced GoCat.
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Originally Posted by Established
(Post 9738275)
TiggOz is Tigerair's new call sign since October last year. It has replaced GoCat.
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Are you talking about Ground SMC or the Ground Handler?
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Originally Posted by coaldemon
(Post 9738442)
Are you talking about Ground SMC or the Ground Handler?
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Aerial perspective, the "virgin" callsign you refer to is a radio telephony callsign applicable to ATC comms.
The use of "Virgin" by Virgin AMCO on company frequency is not governed by the icao doc and they could call themselves "purple underpants with pink dots" if they wanted to. Virgin Blue used "Virgin" as a radio telephony callsign for years - 2000 until about 2011 if I remember correctly under an agreement with Airservices. Even with Atlantic operating into Australia - the Atlantic Australian flight numbers were quarantined so there weren't any duplications. It was only the push to get a common callsign across PB, the 777 operation and the Australian domestic operation that they switched to velocity |
Originally Posted by Snakecharma
(Post 9738459)
Aerial perspective, the "virgin" callsign you refer to is a radio telephony callsign applicable to ATC comms.
The use of "Virgin" by Virgin AMCO on company frequency is not governed by the icao doc and they could call themselves "purple underpants with pink dots" if they wanted to. Virgin Blue used "Virgin" as a radio telephony callsign for years - 2000 until about 2011 if I remember correctly under an agreement with Airservices. Even with Atlantic operating into Australia - the Atlantic Australian flight numbers were quarantined so there weren't any duplications. It was only the push to get a common callsign across PB, the 777 operation and the Australian domestic operation that they switched to velocity |
Have you considered that the ground station is identifying themselves?
They are Virgin Sydney not Velocity Sydney. Similarly contracted airlines call Qantas Sydney if they use Qantas for ground handling. If you are talking licensing regs I assume you mean Part 61? As far as licensing is concerned I don't know if ground people require a flight radiotelephony licence - they used to if I remember correctly but not sure these days - but they could call themselves "Big Sky base" if they wanted |
Originally Posted by Snakecharma
(Post 9738471)
Have you considered that the ground station is identifying themselves?
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These are the issues currently in Australia, what a ground handler is called on the company frequency 😐
Seriously, who cares. |
and they could call themselves "purple underpants with pink dots" if they wanted to. |
What an amazing thread this is
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Originally Posted by morno
(Post 9738555)
These are the issues currently in Australia, what a ground handler is called on the company frequency 😐
Seriously, who cares. |
Originally Posted by Snakecharma
(Post 9738471)
Have you considered that the ground station is identifying themselves?
They are Virgin Sydney not Velocity Sydney. Similarly contracted airlines call Qantas Sydney if they use Qantas for ground handling. If you are talking licensing regs I assume you mean Part 61? As far as licensing is concerned I don't know if ground people require a flight radiotelephony licence - they used to if I remember correctly but not sure these days - but they could call themselves "Big Sky base" if they wanted And no, Part 64 CASR covers licensing for Radio Operators but I don't think it covers callsigns. |
Originally Posted by morno
(Post 9738555)
These are the issues currently in Australia, what a ground handler is called on the company frequency 😐
Seriously, who cares. |
Originally Posted by AerialPerspective
(Post 9738636)
Yes... Qantas say "QANTAS TWO-NINER this is QANTAS SYDNEY". They do that because Qantas' ICAO callsign is Qantas. British Airways' is Speedbird and they don't say in London "BA London this is Speedbird Eleven" they say "Speedbird London". Carriers who are handled by Qantas call Qantas Sydney because that's what their route manual tells them to do because the handling is by Qantas and no one is going to answer if they use their own company callsign because there's no one there to answer. Every airline I'm aware of that calls it's own company groundstations uses it's ICAO call sign except VA. If there's a process to obtain callsigns and VS has "Virgin" but VA is allowed to use it, what is the point of getting callsigns and registering them in the first place, why not just use whatever they want???
And no, Part 64 CASR covers licensing for Radio Operators but I don't think it covers callsigns. The issue with VA started when they expanded into international ops. If they stayed a domestic carry then the use of Virgin wold not have been a problem. |
FFS is this really what people have time to spend on.
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Some TT passengers might get a nice ride soon.... Alliance just bought another F70 from the Dutch royal family.....
Dutch government plane sold to Australian airline for ?3,7 million | NL Times |
'China Southern 343 Hold short of alpha and Give way to the Velocity 737'
'Where is the Velocity, I see no Velocity' 'Give way to the 737 on your right' 'Ahh yes I see 737 give way, and where is the velocity coming' :ugh: |
Originally Posted by Break Right
(Post 9738694)
FFS is this really what people have time to spend on.
I already acknowledged about 5 posts back other's viewpoints by saying "Fair enough..." FFS. And someone mentioned above that I should go to the United States... no, I shouldn't and I hope we never base our standards in this country on that environment. |
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