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Loss of Communication

Loss of Communication

Loss of Communication

Loss of Communication

Loss of Communication

Description

Loss of communication incidents usually occur in one of three circumstances:

  1. Radio Interference
  2. Mis-management of communications equipment or misapplication of prescribed procedures or
  3. Malfunction with communications equipment

Loss of communication may be transitory or prolonged. It most often occurs because of inadvertent mismanagement of aircraft equipment by the flight crew.

The term Prolonged loss of communication (PLOC) has no official definition but was used by some people in the period 1995/2005 to describe long periods of loss of communication that was believed to be attributable to technical causes but, as hard evidence was examined, also became widely attributable to pilots failing to communicate with serviceable equipment.

The term COMLOSS is used by some military agencies to refer to significant losses of communication for any reason.

In the USA, aircraft that have lost the ability to communicate via radio, are sometimes referred to as NORDO (no radio).

Effects

Whether brief or prolonged, loss of communication has obvious flight safety significance. Potentially dangerous outcomes include the following:

Defenses

Typical Scenarios

Contributory Factors

Solutions

Accidents and Incidents

The following events include Loss of Communication as a contributory factor:

Related Articles

Further Reading

HindSight Articles:

AGC Safety Letters:

EUROCONTROL Action Plan for Air-Ground Communications Safety:

EUROCONTROL Reports:

Read more:

ATC Active Listening

Aircraft Communications, Addressing and Reporting System

Air-Ground Voice Communications

Aeronautical Frequency Protection from Interference

Automatic Terminal Information Service (ATIS)

Aviation

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