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Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Communication

Fighter pilots sometimes find themselves alone in the sky, but usually they are there as part of a team.

Yours is one of five planes in the skies over hostile territory. You need to keep in touch with your squadron mates at all times. And you must keep them informed of what you see.

Since you are flying the "point" -- in the lead -- you need to describe for the other pilots what you see and encounter.

Describe each of the following sights over your radio communication system, keeping in mind these rules:

  • Keep each transmission as brief as possible.
  • Use the points of the clock (12 o'clock is straight ahead, for instance) to describe where things are located.
  • End each transmission with the word "over."
  • Use the following shorthand: "AA" for anti-aircraft; "Bogey" for enemy aircraft.

You see:

  1. All the way off to your right, at a distance of five miles, an anti-aircraft battery on the ground. It does not appear to be combat-ready.
  2. Directly ahead, an enemy plane flying away from you and the squadron.
  3. On the ground, diagonally off to your left side, the main target of your mission.
  4. Off to your left, on the ground, another anti-aircraft battery, this one apparently armed and ready to fire.