Originally posted by V-Tail:
quote:
Originally posted by RHINOWSO:
I imagine they'll attempt to contact you on Guard, 121.5 AM.
I agree with you, that is how it
should work. Great in theory, unfortunately it doesn't work in practice.
I have held a Flight Instructor certificate for more than 50 years. I tell my trainees, until I'm blue in the face, "Monitor 121.5 on your # 2 radio. Always." When I give someone a Flight Review, I watch for this.
Do you want to guess how many General Aviation pilots actually do this? My experience says, fewer than one percent.
I seem to recall that the military radios had a receiver that did monitor UHF guard, way way back when I was involved with avionics maintenance in the Navy. If the radio was powered on, guard frequency was being monitored. Our civilian gear does not have that, so we have to remember to tune the second radio (most of us have two) to 121.5 and enable the receiver via the audio panel. Virtually nobody remembers this. I have never seen it on a store-bought checklist, either, although I do put it on my custom-built checklists.