I would never use my personal call sign on the interwebs...oh crap.
OK, OK, OK. Take your pack off.
I will grant you some attack pukes may have "occasionally" had the need for a personal tactical callsign......... Certainly a lot more than "Spy" or "Spook" for the AI guy, and "Quack" or "Dicksmith" for the Flt. Surgeon.
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I always find it amusing when Mids show up in the squadron and invariably, one of the first questions they have is: "what's your callsign?" followed closely by "when do you get a callsign?"
We always manage to disappoint them when we say "well, as helo guys we aren't as nutty about callsigns as the jet guys". I know plenty of folks who have nicknames. And we have mess names for mess meeting shenanigans. I don't know too many helo folks who have an honest to god callsign that has supplanted their actual name and has become a part of their identity. Most people just call each other by their names on the ground.
Marine helo pilots all get callsigns, because we fly a lot of form.
Since we don't fly too much outside of a section, where do y'all use the callsign? Is it once you start getting multiple sections where everyone can't use the squadron callsign without making a giant mess on the radios (which is where I had always heard the genesis of callsigns came from)?
5. Company Grade will usually come up with unofficial, vulgar call signs with which to refer to our Majors, because Majors (by virtue of their existence) rate our ridicule.
Call signs (at least within my squadron, but from what I understand, pretty common for Assaults):
1. Individual aircraft and flights utilize the squadron's tactical call sign and schedule/ATO event numbers as flight call signs. For example, the first line of the flight schedule will always be "[Squadron] 01." The second and third lines, if a section, will always be "[Squadron] 02," with the -2 aircraft using "03" if the flight is broken up.
When we are composite, each T/M/S is given a series of numbers to use. Without going into specifics, the first Phrog will be "[Squadron] 01," and the first Shitter will be "[Squadron] 20."
2. Modexes are used when communicating with Base (so the boss knows which specific birds are airborne), when communicating with Maintenance, and when operating within the ship's tower's airspace.
3. Personal call signs are used when talking aircraft to aircraft either between, or within, flights. For example, instead of saying "[Squadron] 02" to talk to my wingman, I can just say "Hey Dirtbag" on my interflight freq.
4. Personal call signs are rarely used on the ground (non-flying), because as stated before, that's pretty much a fixed-wing thing. First names are the norm for us.
5. Company Grade will usually come up with unofficial, vulgar call signs with which to refer to our Majors, because Majors (by virtue of their existence) rate our ridicule.
6. See Skid's post (above) for Escort ops.
Clear as mud?
It's good to see the important things are not lost in the blue to green translation. Filthy Hinges!
5. Company Grade will usually come up with unofficial, vulgar call signs with which to refer to our Majors, because Majors (by virtue of their existence) rate our ridicule.
That's alright, we have names for you chuckleheads too...
What a politically correct top 10 list. Where is the Blue Angel's Larry "Fudge" Packer?The Naval Safety Center has a great page listing Navy personal Call Signs, including their Top 10 list of their favorite call signs.
Link
What a politically correct top 10 list. Where is the Blue Angel's Larry "Fudge" Packer?