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Radio Tuning Done Right

By Stephen Pope / Published: Oct 09, 2012
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I was checking out an online preview of a video series by a flight instructor who, for a small charge, promised to teach you to be a better pilot. So, of course, I couldn’t resist critiquing this instructor’s web lesson.

He made a lot of little mistakes, mostly having to do with his use of the radios and his phraseology. Two errors stood out.

The first we’ve mentioned in past tips: On the ground, the instructor was given a frequency he should expect after departure, which he dutifully wrote down and read back to the controller. But after switching over to the tower frequency, he never put his next expected frequency in the standby window, which would have been a big help in avoiding his next error.

On climbout, the tower controller instructed the pilot to change to the new frequency. Here’s where he made his subsequent mistake, and it’s the topic of this week’s tip. The numbers he needed to dial in could have been acquired by turning the knob a few places to the right. Instead, this flight instructor spun the knob to the left, and spun it some more, and some more, until he reached the proper frequency.

The frequency adjustment knobs on aviation radios work just like volume knobs. Turning the knob left makes the numbers go down, turning it right makes them go up. If your radio is tuned, say, to 124.85 and you need to tune in 127.05, turn the knobs for frequency selection to the right, not the left, to reach the desired frequency more quickly and easily. The same goes for nav radios.

It might seem like a minor thing, but over the long run it will save you a lot of knob twisting.

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BillFishJr's picture

eeeeyup. it's called "staying ahead of the airplane."
well stated.

vanzi's picture

Very good to remember:
1) allways write down the frequency given by ATC. If the electrodigits go blank on the main COM, who remember the frequency we were using till then?
2) once received the next frequency, allways verify that the one preselected IS the one received: often happens that it will be changed. Never blindtrust.
3) NEVER preselect the ground frequency during the final approach: it is better to have the APP freq ready during a goaround being busy and under time pressure in flying the plane, changeing configuration, getting out from the landing-taxying-go homing idea had before. On the ground, there is a lot of time to tune the next freq... simple.

Stan3818's picture

Seriously??? We are at the point where you're criticizing the DIRECTION in which one turns the tuning knob on a radio? I agree with the part about having the departure control frequency in the standby window so that it can be quickly tuned with one button press, but for the love of Mike, could you please call us when you're ready to talk about something substantive that will make flying SAFER?

Hogey74's picture

Seems a tad nit-picky but I recall at least one older IFR pilot in these pages talking about being taught to turn one dial, do a full scan, turn the next dial, do a full scan etc. He'd agree with this article I'm sure. Plus, to be fair, I remember my instructor frowning at me when I was spinning the wrong way around the dial and telling me not to do that in a flight test as it showed that I didn't really know what I was doing. Failing to pre-set the next frequency is just bad airmanship.

nightflyer's picture

Have to agree with the author, tuning the shortest route distracts you away from your primary duties for less time, especially when tuning 833 radios which have three digits behind the decimal point. If you go the long way around to a new frequency it's a lot of dialing.

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