Every transmission answers up to four questions, in this order — the Four W's:
"Torrance Ground, Helicopter Seven Zero Six Juliet Juliet, west ramp, information Bravo, request southeast departure."
After a facility answers using your callsign, you may shorten to "Six Juliet Juliet." Give the ATIS code only on the FIRST call to each facility.
This is your one-stop VFR comms text, synthesized from the AIM, the FARs (14 CFR), the Pilot's Handbook of Aeronautical Knowledge, the Helicopter Flying Handbook, AC 90-66C, and the Pilot/Controller Glossary. Every section cites its source so you can go deeper later (References tab). Work it in 5-minute blocks: read one tab, then drill it in the Practice tab. Log the day to keep your streak.
| Word | Means |
|---|---|
| Roger | I received all of your last transmission. Does NOT mean "yes" and is NOT a readback. |
| Wilco | Received AND I will comply. |
| Affirmative / Negative | Yes / No (or permission denied). |
| Unable | I can't do that (safety, performance, or rules). |
| Standby | Wait; I'll get back to you. Not a "yes." |
| Say again | Repeat your last. (Never "repeat" — that's artillery.) |
| Verify | Confirm this is correct. |
| Monitor [freq] | Listen on that frequency; do not call up. |
| Contact [facility] | Switch and establish two-way with them. |
| Ident | Press the transponder IDENT button. |
| Traffic in sight / Negative contact / Looking | I see it / I don't see it / still searching. |
Source: Pilot/Controller Glossary; AIM 4-2-3.
| Don't say | Instead |
|---|---|
| "This is..." | Just your callsign. |
| "...with you" / "checking in" | State position + altitude. |
| "Any traffic in the area, please advise" | Self-announce your own position. (Not a recognized phrase — AIM 4-1-9.) |
| "Over and out" | Neither, on ATC. Pick one if any. |
| "Repeat" | "Say again." |
| "Roger" to a clearance | Read back the instruction. |
| "Please / thank you" (excess) | Brevity IS the courtesy. |
AIM 4-2-1(c): jargon, chatter, and CB slang have no place in ATC communications.
Say digits individually. 3=TREE · 4=FOW-er · 5=FIFE · 9=NIN-er · 0=ZE-RO. Thousands: "one thousand five hundred." Altimeter/freqs digit-by-digit. Runway "two niner right."
Initial contact: aircraft type or "Helicopter" + full N-number, dropping the "N": Helicopter Seven Zero Six Juliet Juliet (or Robinson Seven Zero Six Juliet Juliet).
After ATC abbreviates (prefix + last three: "Six Juliet Juliet"), you may use the short form too. Don't shorten it yourself until they do.
You don't repeat everything. You read back the items a wrong number could kill you on, plus your callsign — and acknowledge the rest.
| Item | Read back? |
|---|---|
| Runway hold short / LAHSO | MUST (with the runway name). ATC is required to get this from you. |
| Altitude assignment | SHOULD (the "numbers") |
| Heading / vector | SHOULD |
| Runway assignment (taxi-to, takeoff, landing) | SHOULD — incl. left/right/center |
| Taxi route / instructions | SHOULD (good practice) |
| Frequency change | Optional — read back only if unsure |
| Squawk code | Optional but smart |
| Wind, traffic advisories, "expect..." | No — just acknowledge (callsign, "looking," "traffic in sight") |
MUST = required (AIM 4-3-18, FAA Order 7110.65). SHOULD = strong recommendation (AIM 4-4-7). Always include your callsign; read back in the same order given.
ATC: "Helicopter Six Juliet Juliet, wind two five zero at eight, runway two niner right, cleared for takeoff, left downwind approved."
Tape recorder: "Wind two five zero at eight, runway two niner right cleared for takeoff, left downwind approved, Helicopter Six Juliet Juliet."
Tight: "Two niner right, cleared for takeoff, left downwind, Six Juliet Juliet."
Drop the wind (info, not an instruction). Keep runway + clearance + your turn.
ATC: "Six Juliet Juliet, enter left base runway two niner right, report two-mile final, traffic is a Cessna on a three-mile final."
Tight: "Left base two niner right, report two-mile final, looking for traffic, Six Juliet Juliet."
ATC: "Six Juliet Juliet, taxi to the ramp via Bravo, hold short of runway one one left."
"Bravo, hold short runway one one left, Six Juliet Juliet."
The runway name in a hold-short readback is non-negotiable. If you omit it, expect ATC to ask again.
Class D under the SoCal/LAX Bravo shelf. The handoff chain is ATIS → Ground → Tower → SoCal → (reverse on return). Tap each step. Frequencies left blank — fill in current ones off the chart/ATIS; runway "two niner right" is the typical calm-wind assignment, but always use what ATIS/Tower gives.
"Torrance Ground, Helicopter Seven Zero Six Juliet Juliet, JJ Helicopters / west ramp, information [X], request southeast departure."
Expect: hover/taxi instructions, maybe hold short. Read back runway/hold-short + callsign."Torrance Tower, Six Juliet Juliet, ready for departure, southeast."
Expect: "cleared for takeoff" + a departure instruction. Read back runway + clearance + the turn."frequency change approved" or "squawk VFR". If you want advisories, ask Tower for the SoCal frequency or contact SoCal directly clear of the D."SoCal Approach, Helicopter Seven Zero Six Juliet Juliet, off Torrance, [altitude], request VFR flight following to [practice area / destination]."
Expect a squawk + "radar contact." Squawk is optional to read back; smart to."squawk VFR, frequency change approved" or hand you to Tower. Get ATIS. Then:"Torrance Tower, Helicopter Six Juliet Juliet, [position e.g. five east], [altitude], information [X], inbound full stop.""Torrance Ground, Six Juliet Juliet, clear of two niner right, taxi to JJ Helicopters."Verify all frequencies and the active runway every flight. Sources: AIM 4-1-13 (ATIS), 4-2-3, 4-3-2, 4-1-18 (flight following), 91.129 (Class D).
Outbound: ATIS → Clearance Delivery (if present) → Ground (taxi) → Tower (takeoff).
Inbound: ATIS → Tower (pattern/landing) → Ground (taxi to parking).
Establish two-way before entering Class D: when the controller says your callsign, you're "established." If they say "[callsign] standby" — you ARE established. If they say "aircraft calling, remain clear of Class Delta" — you are NOT; stay out.
AIM 4-3, 14 CFR 91.129.
No one to ask permission; you self-announce on the CTAF. Same Four W's, then repeat the airport name at the end:
"Whiteman traffic, Helicopter Six Juliet Juliet, two miles south, inbound to land, Whiteman."
AC 90-66C (2023); AIM 4-1-9. The FAA does not regulate pattern ENTRY, only pattern FLOW — observe and conform to traffic already established.
| Class | Comm requirement (VFR) |
|---|---|
| B | Explicit "cleared into the Class Bravo" BEFORE entry. Two-way alone is not enough. |
| C | Two-way established (they say your callsign) + Mode C transponder. |
| D | Two-way established before entry (tower). |
| E | No comm required for VFR. |
| G | No comm required; self-announce at non-towered fields. |
The "magic words": callsign = cleared to enter C/D. "Cleared into the Bravo" = the only entry into B. 14 CFR 91.129/91.130/91.131; AIM 3-2.
A service, not a clearance — provided workload permitting. Request from approach or center:
"SoCal Approach, Helicopter Six Juliet Juliet, [position], [altitude], request VFR flight following to [dest]."
They'll assign a squawk and say "radar contact." You still see-and-avoid; you must report leaving their frequency. To end it: "terminate flight following, Six Juliet Juliet."
AIM 4-1-18 (Terminal Radar Services for VFR), 4-1-15.
The AIM gives helicopters their own procedures at towered fields, recognizing your ability to operate off taxiways, ramps, and non-movement areas.
| Term | Use |
|---|---|
| Hover taxi | Slow movement at/below ~25 ft over a defined route. Watch downwash. |
| Air taxi | Request when you want above-25-ft, faster, more direct movement. You pick a safe altitude/route; ATC expects you to expedite. |
| Proceed as requested | ATC authorizes your requested operation. |
"Six Juliet Juliet, request air taxi to the south helipad."
"unable" if a route risks parked aircraft or people.AIM 4-3-17; Helicopter Flying Handbook (FAA-H-8083-21B), heliport/airport operations. Rotor downwash hazard: AIM 7-3-7.
MAYDAY, MAYDAY, MAYDAY — distress; grave, imminent danger (engine failure, fire). PAN-PAN, PAN-PAN, PAN-PAN — urgency; a problem but not yet grave.
Then: who, what, where, intentions. Guard frequency 121.5. Squawk 7700.
"Mayday, mayday, mayday, SoCal, Helicopter Six Juliet Juliet, engine failure, two miles north of Torrance, autorotating to the field."
AIM Chapter 6; "aviate, navigate, communicate" — fly first.
| Code | Meaning |
|---|---|
| 1200 | VFR (default) |
| 7500 | Hijack |
| 7600 | Lost communications |
| 7700 | Emergency |
Squawk 7600. At a towered field, watch the tower for light gun signals and acknowledge by rocking the wings (day) / flashing landing light (night). VFR: proceed to land using light signals.
| Signal | In flight | On ground |
|---|---|---|
| Steady green | Cleared to land | Cleared for takeoff |
| Flashing green | Return to land | Cleared to taxi |
| Steady red | Give way, keep circling | Stop |
| Flashing red | Airport unsafe, do not land | Taxi clear of runway |
| Flashing white | — | Return to start point |
| Alt. red/green | Extreme caution | Extreme caution |
AIM 4-2-13 (transmitter/receiver inoperative), 6-4-1; 14 CFR 91.185 (IFR). PHAK Airport Operations chapter has the same table.
Everything in this tool, traced to the source publication so you can study one topic in one place.
| Topic | Primary sources |
|---|---|
| Radio technique & phraseology | AIM 4-2-1, 4-2-2, 4-2-3 |
| Aircraft call signs / abbreviation | AIM 4-2-4 |
| Phonetic alphabet & figures | AIM 4-2-7, 4-2-8, 4-2-9 |
| Contact procedures (Four W's) | AIM 4-2-3; AOPA/Flying training tips |
| Readback requirements | AIM 4-4-7, 4-3-18; FAA Order 7110.65 2-4-3; 14 CFR 91.123 |
| Towered airport operations | AIM 4-3; 14 CFR 91.129; PHAK Airport Operations ch. |
| Non-towered / CTAF / self-announce | AC 90-66C; AIM 4-1-9; 14 CFR 91.126 |
| ATIS / ASOS / AWOS | AIM 4-1-13 |
| Class B/C/D entry comms | AIM 3-2; 14 CFR 91.129/.130/.131 |
| VFR flight following | AIM 4-1-15, 4-1-18 |
| Helicopter operations & phraseology | AIM 4-3-17, 7-3-7; HFH (FAA-H-8083-21B) |
| Light gun signals | AIM 4-3-13; PHAK Airport Operations ch. |
| Lost comms / radio failure | AIM 4-2-13, 6-4-1; 14 CFR 91.185 |
| Emergencies / Mayday / Pan-Pan | AIM Chapter 6 |
| Transponder codes | AIM 4-1-20 |
| Standard term definitions | Pilot/Controller Glossary (P/CG) |
| ACS standard (you must use standard phraseology) | Private Pilot ACS (FAA-S-ACS-6) |
All FAA publications are free at faa.gov. This tool synthesizes them; it doesn't replace a read of AIM Ch. 4 once your maneuvers calendar opens up.