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Old January 30th 07, 03:08 PM posted to rec.aviation.ifr
John Clonts
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Posts: 33
Default FSS on IFR Enroute charts

All true, except that none of those references actually specify that
it's the FSS that receives on that frequency rather than the pilot.
It may be obvious once you know it, but until then it is a question
almost every pilot faces-- hopefully not at the instant that he really
needs to know it, because at that point it's almost impossible to find
it!

On Jan 29, 5:52 pm, "Bob Gardner" wrote:
Look at the legend panel on the sectional. It says "R - Receive only." Also,
read the legend pages in any Airport Facilities Directory under the heading
"Communications," It's amazing what you can learn by reading legend pages.
The AS/FD answers your question by saying "122.1 is the primary receive-only
frequency at VORs. 122.05, 122.15, and 123.6 are assigned at selected VORs
meeting certain criteria." (No word on what those criteria are.)

Bob Gardner

"kevmor" wrote in oglegroups.com...



When looking at a VOR navaid box on an enroute chart, and it says the
FSS station frequency on top of the box, such as 122.1R, does that
mean receive only for them on that frequency or receive only for the
pilot? Does the pilot listen on the VOR and transmit on 122.1
(receive only for them)?


Also, it says the FSS name below and outside the navaid box, with the
L-shaped sides. After reading the chart symbols, it says this is
remoted to a navaid site, does that mean to that VOR it's associated
with? I'm looking at L-2 by Sacramento (Rancho FSS)...- Hide quoted text -- Show quoted text -