Airline Company Voice Frequencies ?

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BOBRR

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Hello:

Can anyone suggest a reasonably recent source of Airline Company Voice frequencies used now a days ?

Or, are just about all comms between the plane and its Company digital, such as acars, etc. ?

How about Arinc; are some of these voice (which ?), or also just digital ?
Live outside of Boston.

Thanks,
Bob
 

gccflscan

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BOBRR said:
Hello:
Or, are just about all comms between the plane and its Company digital, such as acars, etc. ?

How about Arinc; are some of these voice (which ?), or also just digital ?
Live outside of Boston.

Just about all the company channels are now operated by ARINC now.

ARINC even operates some iDEN based TRS's at some airports for the facility comms as well.
 

timmer

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I don't have a list, but you can make your own. Search between 128.825 and 132.0. I still hear quite a bit of voice traffic in this range. Everything from maintenance questions to passenger problems, requests for wheel chairs and pilots requesting alternate landing sites due to bad/severe weather. They also use voice comm's when their acars is not working, (which seems to happen quite often.)
 
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DaveNF2G

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Also search 136.000 to 136.975 for new ATC, ARINC, and ACARS channels.
 

b52hbuff

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Or you can go to the FCC site and do a search on licensed frequencies in the aviation band.

As someone pointed out, your returns are going to be all listed as 'ARINC', so you need to go back and figure out who is talking...
 
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I simply allocate one scanner just to monitor all of the 127 airline operational frequencies in the 128.85-132.0 range. I also add in 122.95 since it's used by FBO's for inbound aircraft.

By scanning all of the frequencies, I'm never concerned with new frequencies being added somewhere. It takes less than two seconds to scan them all.

To pinpoint a certain frequency that has activity, you could program it into another radio, monitor it for a while and make notes of who and what you hear.

Mark Holmes
Marion, IL
markinillinois@webtv.net
 
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