prv
Well-Known Member
Now you lot have got me racking my memory. I use "nothing heard - out" after calling a couple of times and getting no response and have done for years. Where did I get it from? I can't find the RYA VHF SRC handbook that I got with the course all those years ago. It seems much too common (and sensible) to be an ad hoc creation.
I *think* it's a military thing, but the lessons in the Signals Wing at Sandhurst were a long time ago now
Seems eminently sensible to me to use it on marine VHF as well. No need to make a big production of it, just rattle off a quick "Nonsuch, Ariam, nothing heard, out." twenty or thirty seconds after the final attempt at calling. Closes things off neatly, and might just alert the other party that you weren't ignoring them but couldn't hear.
Starting the initial call with the word "hello" is definitely a military thing, but I'm not sure if it's also a marine one? Its purpose is to fill the split second during which the squelch is opening and the human on the other end is switching their attention to the radio. It's natural to squeeze the pressel at the same moment you begin speaking; if the first thing out of your mouth is the first character of a callsign then it's likely to get missed. "Hello" is kind of sacrificial noise
Pete