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Whre does roger come from?

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Whre does roger come from?

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Old 8th Jul 2004, 18:40
  #21 (permalink)  
 
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In the days of traditional radio operators dialing up a frequency, was often referred to as "xyz coming up" or "coming up on XYZ"

"Coming down" is probably a derivative of this practice as the transponder is sending the signal back down to the ground station.
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Old 9th Jul 2004, 04:05
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Sorry redsnail you got it perfectly backwards.

Australian pilots use "Romeo" NOT Rodger
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Old 12th Jul 2004, 21:11
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There seems to be a bit of confusion re Roger in Australia. Romeo is used for the letter R in the phonetic alphabet, Roger is used to say yes, although affirm is more common.
The story I heard about the origin of Roger was that the first radio controlled airport in the US of A used to get pilots to acknowledge transmissions with their name. Roger used was a very busy pilot at that airport and so visiting pilots would hear his name more that others. Eventually they all started using his name.

Steve
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Old 12th Jul 2004, 21:23
  #24 (permalink)  
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4-7-11,

Charlie Charlie is still used on HF.

Just noticed the co-incidence!!

HF
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Old 13th Jul 2004, 00:18
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Just got this from my brother who is in the Oz navy;

I spoke to James who was a Communicator and is now a Seaman Officer. The
Navy uses the word ROGER, the only time it would use ROMEO is when using
flags. (ie. Flag Romeo) Sydney Harbour Control and Coastwatch use the word
ROMEO.

Steve
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Old 13th Jul 2004, 01:06
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Um Pilotgal....in Oz, ROMEO is only used in the phonetic alphabet to signify the letter R. Nothing else.

ROGER is used to signify "message understood".

In 8 years of flying in just about every cornor of Oz, I have yet to hear anything different.
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Old 13th Jul 2004, 06:58
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Quote: In OZ........ ROGER is used to signify "message understood"

Thats interesting because in the UK "Roger" simply means that you have received ALL of the last transmission. It has nothing to do with comprehension, agreement or complying. In other words you may not have understood any of it, but the reply is still "Roger". This is obviously an extreme example, but nevertherless correct.
However, only a fool would not then ask questions to clarify any uncertainty.
In the UK, "yes" is spoken as "affirm" and "true, or accurate" is spoken as "correct" on the RT.

All in CAP 413
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Old 13th Jul 2004, 13:26
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"There seems to be a bit of confusion re Roger in Australia."

Not in the minds of a few million sheep, I would venture....

'Roger' means, quite literally, "I heard you".







Unless it involves sheep, of course...
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Old 13th Jul 2004, 13:37
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that made me chuckle
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