Aviator Slang


Yes, military pilots really do talk this way! This is not an all-inclusive list of military acronyms, just the type of lingo you're apt to hear in the Ready-Room, on the flightline, or in the aircraft.


| A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z |

A - "Alpha"

AAA

Anti-aircraft Artillery. Rapid-firing cannon or machine guns, often aimed by computers and radar.

ACM

Air Combat Maneuvering, or dogfighting.

Admin

The rented room that is the party headquarters ashore, usually at a foreign port of call.

AGL

Above Ground Level. An airplane's altimeter reads height above Mean Sea Level (MSL); the more realistic measurement over land is height Above Ground Level. Most military aircraft have a "radar-altimeter", which reads aircraft height above ground level.

Air Boss

Head of the Air Department onboard a carrier; he rules the flight deck.

Air Wing

The entire complement of aircraft fielded by the carrier in battle: fighters, attack jets, early-warning planes, tankers, helicopters, antisubmarine patrol craft, etc.

Alert 5

A manned aircraft that can launch within five minutes. The Navy has time restrictions as to how long a crew can stand an Alert-5 watch. Similarly, Alert 15, Alert 30, Alert 60.

Aluminum Cloud

The F-14 is so large that it is sometimes referred to by this term.

Alpha Mike Foxtrot

Sometimes simply "AMF". Phonetics for "Adios Mother F*cker*.

Angels

Altitude, measured in thousands of feet ("angels fifteen" means 15,000 feet above sea level). Also, a term lovingly ascribed to the rescue helicopter by any aviator who has experienced an ejection and subsequent helicopter rescue.

Anti-Smash

Aircraft strobe, or anti-collision, lights.

Angle of Attack (AOA)

Angle of the wing relative to the forward flight path of the airplane. On any aircraft, too great an angle of attack will cause the wing to stop flying (stall), as airflow across the upper surface is disrupted.

Angles

Gaining angles on a dogfight opponent involves maneuvering for a shot from astern The ultimate in an angles fight is an angle of zero-- straight up the enemy's tailpipe.

ASW

Anti-submarine warfare.

Atoll, Apex, Acrid

NATO code names for Soviet-manufactured air-to-air missiles.

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B - "Bravo"

B/N

Bombardier-navigator; the specific term for the NFO in the A-6 aircraft.

"Back to the Taxpayers"

Where you send a wrecked aircraft.

Bag

Flight suit or anti-exposure suit ("Put on a bag"); as a verb--to collect or acquire: as in, "bag some traps".

Bag Season

Cold weather or water conditions which require the wearing of anti-exposure gear; which is very restrictive, uncomfortable and unpopular

Ball

An amber visual landing aid that the pilot uses to adjust aircaft relative position to a desired final approach glideslope. The primary optical landing device on the carrier.

Bandit

Dogfight adversary positively identified as a bad guy. Hostile aircraft.

Basement

Hangar deck of the aircraft carrier.

Bat Decoder

A sheet of paper carried on all fight operations that is the key to current airborne communication codes.

Bat-turn

A tight, high-G change of heading. A reference to the rapid 180-degree Batmobile maneuver in the old "Batman" television series.

Beaded Up

Worried or excited.

Behind the Power Curve

Not keeping up with expectations.

Bent

Damaged or broken.

Bingo

Minimum fuel for a comfortable and safe return to base. Aircraft can fly and fight past bingo fuel in combat situations, but at considerable peril.

Bingo Field

Land-based runway to which carrier aircraft can divert if necessary.

Birds

Aircraft

Blower

Afterburner.

Blue-Water Ops

Carrier flight operations beyond the reach of land bases or bingo fields.

Boards Out

Speed brakes extended

Boat

Any Navy ship regardless of size. The aircraft carrier is "THE Boat".

Bogey

Unidentified and potentially hostile aircraft.

Bolt, Bolter

A carrier landing attempt in which the tailhook fails to engage any of the arresting wires, requiring a "go-around", and in which the aircraft landing gear contacts the deck. Otherwise it is a "low pass".

Boola-Boola

Radio call made when a pilot shoots down a drone.

Booming

Loud, raucous partying ("we were booming last night"); or, fast, exciting flying ("we went booming through the Grand Canyon").

Boresight

Technically, to line up the axis of a gun with its sights, but pilots use the term to describe concentrating on a small detail to the point of causing some detriment to the "big picture".

BOREX

A dull, repetitive exercise (a busy. tense one might be a SWEATEX).

Bought the Farm

Died. Originated from the practice of the government reimbursing farmers for crops destroyed due to aviation accidents on their fields. The farmer's, knowing a good thing when they see it, would inflate the value of lost crops to the point that, in effect, the mishap pilot "bought the farm". Student pilots regularly practice emergency landings to farmer's fields. (This one term must have a bazillion different origins judging from the amount of "corrections" I've received. I still like this one - ed.)

Bounce, Tap

Unexpected attack on another aircraft.

Brain Housing Group

Mock-technical term for the skull.

Bravo Zulu

Praise for a good job.

Bubbas

Fellow squadron members; anyone who flies the same aircraft as you do.

Bumping

ACM (Air Combat Maneuvering),also called "bumping heads".

BuNo

Bureau number, the permanent serial number that the Navy assigns to an aircraft when it is built.

Burner

Afterburner; a system that feeds raw fuel into a jet's hot exhaust, thus greatly increasing both thrust and fuel consumption.

Buster

Controller term for full military power: to hurry up, go as fast as possible.

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C - "Charlie"

CAG

Commander of the Air Group - the carrier's chief pilot.

Carqual, or CQ

Carrier qualification; a set number of carrier takeoffs and landings required in training and at periodic intervals of all carrier flight crews.

Catshot

A carrier takeoff assisted by a steam-powered catapult. A "cold cat," one in which insufficient launch pressure has been set into the device, can place the hapless aircraft in the water. A 'hot cat" -- too much pressure - is less perilous, but can rip out the nose wheel assembly or the launching bridle. Once a pair of common problems, but practically unheard-of today.

CAVU

Ceiling And Visibility Unlimited: the best possible flying weather.

Centurion

An aviator who has made 100 shipboard landings, typically a centurion patch is then issued and proudly worn on the flight jacket.

Charlie

The planned landing time aboard a carrier.

Charlie Foxtrot

Phonetics for "cluster-f*ck"

Check Six

Visual observation of the rear quadrant, from which most air-to-air attacks can be expected. Refers to the clock system of scanning the envelope around the aircraft; 12 o'clock is straight ahead, 6 o'clock is directly astern. Also a common salutation and greeting among tactical pilots. Keep an eye on your behind, be careful.

Checking for Light Leaks

Taking a nap, referring to the eyelids

Cherubs

Altitude under 1,000 feet, measured in hundreds of feet ("cherubs two" means 200 feet).

Cold Nose

Radar turned off , also known as "Lights out", (Navy pilots transmit "My nose is cold" before refueling from Air Force tankers).

COD

Carrier On-Board Delivery aircraft, used to transfer personnel and cargo to and from the carrier.

Colorful Actions

Flathatting, showing off, or otherwise ignoring safe procedures while flying.

Combat Dump

A bowel movement before flying; also called "sending an admiral to sea"

Cones

Students, short for coneheads: also called nurkin heads, or studs.

Conning

Making contrails.

Contract

Agreements and ground rules, some minor and some life-threatening, between two-man fighter crews or between wingmen.

Crossdeck Pendant

An arresting wire on an aircraft carrier; or the attaching cord between a VERTREP helicopter to its externally slung cargo.

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D - "Delta"

Dash Two

The second plane in a two-or-more aircraft formation; the wingman.

Deck Spotter

Derogatory term for a pilot who looks away from the ball to peek at the deck.

Delta

When an aircraft arrives at a boat for recovery, this instruction tells the pilot to stay clear and save gas; refers to a holding pattern at the boat.

Delta Sierra

Phonetics for "dumb shit": describes a stupid action, and erases all previous Bravo Zulus and Sierra Hotels.

Departure

Literally departure from controlled flight, usually brought on in high-performance jets by excessive angle of attack coupled with partial power loss in one engine. All aircraft depart differently, but some anxious moments and some loss of altitude will result before control can be regained. Some jets, most notably the F-4 Phantom, are unrecoverable from certain departures.

Dirty

Aircraft configured for landing with gear and flaps down.

Dot

Refers to how a distant aircraft looks on the horizon, ("I'm a dot" means "I'm out of here").

Double Ugly

Fond nickname for the enormously capable but less than beautiful F-4 Phantom. See also Rhino.

Double Nuts

The CAG's bird usually numbered 100 or 00.

Down

Broken, not flying. A sick pilot is "down".

Drift Factor

If you have a high one, you aren't reliable.

Driver

Pilot.

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E - "Echo"

Echo Range

A corner of the China Lake Naval Weapons Test Center outfitted with ground targets and electronic threat simulators. Many Top Gun training sessions are flown over Echo Range.

ECM

Electronic Countermeasures; systems for jamming or misleading enemy weapons, communications, and radar.

Electric Jet

The F-16 Fighting Falcon, so nicknamed because of its fly-by-wire controls.

ELINT

Electronic Intelligence; the gathering of electronic emissions related to communications, weapons control, or reconnaissance.

Envelope

The maximum performance parameters of an aircraft; flying at the edge of the envelope can be both exciting and dangerous.

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F - "Foxtrot"

FAG

Fighter Attack Guy; derogatory term for F/A-18 Hornet drivers.

Fangs Out

When a pilot is really hot for a dogfight.

Fangs Sunk in Floorboard

When a fighter pilot boresights on a kill but ends up getting shot himself.

FARP

Fleet ACM Readiness Program; a periodic training program presented in the context of the Fleet Air Wing; dogfighting practice with an adversary squadron.

FASO

Flight Physiology Training: recurrent safety training for aircrews directed at emphasizing physiological stressors, conditions, or episodes which might be encountered in flight.

FAST

Fleet Air Superiority Training.

Father

Slang term for shipboard TACAN station. There is a Father on most Mothers.

Feet Wet/Dry

The former means "over-water," the latter "over-land."

Fishbed, Flogger

Also Fitter, Flanker, Fresco Fulcrum, etc. NATO code names for Russian fighter aircraft.

Flathatting

Unauthorized low-level flying and stunting--thrilling, sometimes fatal, usually career-ending if caught.

Flare

The nose-up landing posture normal for most land-based aircraft. Carrier jets eliminate flare in favor of a slamming contact with the deck. Also the terminal portion of a helicopter autorotation in which rotor speed can be accelerated while reducing rate-of-descent and forward groundspeed.

Fly-by-wire

Electronic, computer-controlled operation of aircraft control surfaces. Supplants mechanical/hydraulic actuation common in earlier jets. The F-16 Falcon, F/A-18 Hornet, and the French Mirage 2000 use these systems.

FM

Abbreviation for "f*cking magic": very high-tech; used to describe how something you don't understand actually works. The ASQ-81 Magnetic Anomaly System works by "FM".

FOD

Foreign Object Damage. A constant concern on airfields and carrier decks where jet engines operate. Jet intakes can ingest loose objects, and even the smallest item--a rock, a bolt--can seriously damage jet turbine blades.

Fox One, Two, Three

Radio calls indicating the firing of a Sparrow, Sidewinder, or Phoenix air-to-air missile, respectively.

Furball

A confused aerial engagement with many combatants. Several aircraft in tight ACM.

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G - "Golf"

G, G-loading, G-rating

High-performance aircraft subject airframes and occupants to centrifugal forces far beyond simple gravity. One-G equals normal gravity; a pilot and plane pulling 4-Gs in a turn will feel forces equal to four times the weight of gravity.

G-suit

Nylon trousers that wrap around the legs and abdomen. Filled automatically with compressed air in high-G maneuvers, the G-suit helps prevent the pooling of blood in the lower extremities, thus retarding the tendency to lose consciousness. Also known as "speed-jeans"

Gaff Off

Ignore.

Gate

Afterburner. see also Zone

Gigahertz and Nanoseconds

Highly technical, detailed, and hard to understand ("It's getting down to gigahertz and nanoseconds.")

Gizmo

A piece of technical gear (also doodad, thingamabob, or hoo-ha)

Glove

The huge wing root of the F-14 Tomcat, housing the mechanism for moving the variable-geometry wings. Also, Tom Cruise notwithstanding, fireproof gloves are always worn by military pilots regardless of the outside temperature.

Go Juice

Jet fuel.

god

The authority, boss, or person with full responsibility; also descriptive of a pilot's prowess ("He's an ACM god").

Goes Away

What something does when you hit it with a missile.

Gomer

Slang for a dogfight adversary, the usage stemming from the old Gomer Pyle television show.

Goo

Bad weather that makes it impossible to see; in the clouds.

Goon Up

Screw up.

Gouge

The latest inside information. Also the poop, the skinny. A summary of important information.

Green Apple

The control knob for the cockpit's emergency oxygen supply.

Greenie Board

Prominently displayed squadron scoreboard where the landing signal officers rate the pilots' carrier landings (any color other than green is bad ): also called the "weenie board."

Gripe

A mechanical problem on an aircraft. An "up" gripe means you can still fly: a "down" gripe means you can't.

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H - "Hotel"

Hamburger Helper

The bombardier-navigator (B/N) or radar intercept officer (RIO).

Hangar Queen

An aircraft that suffers chronic "downs"; hangar queens are often pirated for spares for the squadron's other aircraft, so when the aircraft leave the carrier at the end of the cruise, the maintenance officer normally flies the hangar queen because he knows which parts have been taken (the "queen's" ejection seats are especially well preflighted).

Hard Deck

An established minimum altitude for training engagements. Early Top Gun hops honor a 10,000-foot AGL hard deck.

Hawk Circle

The orbiting stack of aircraft waiting to land on the carrier.

Head on a Swivel

Keeping an eye peeled for an ACM adversary; also called "doing the Linda Blair," for the 360-degree head rotation in the movie "The Exorcist".

Heater

Sidewinder missile which homes in on heat sources.

Helo

Universal Navy/Marine term for helicopter. Don't say "chopper" unless you're hanging out with the Army.

High PRF

Extremely excitable (PRF is a radar term: pulse repetition frequency).

High Warble

Unduly agitated.

Hop

A Mission, or flight

HOTAS

Hands On Throttle And Stick. Modern fighters have every imaginable control function mounted on either the stick (right hand) or the throttle quadrant (left hand), so that the pilot need not fumble around in the cockpit.

HUD

Heads Up Display. A transparent screen mounted on the dashboard on which pertinent data from flight instruments and weapons systems are projected. The HUD eliminates the need to look down into the cockpit to read instruments.

Hummer

Any ingenious machine--plane, car, or weapon--whose actual name can't be recalled. Also "puppy," "bad boy." The E-2 Hawkeye early-warning aircraft is also nicknamed "Hummer", in reference to the sound of its turboprop engines.

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I - "India"

IFR

Instrument Flight Rules, permitting safe flight in conditions of limited visibility

Indian Night Noises

The ominous creaks, pops, and shudders of an aircraft in flight

In-Flight Engagement

Snagging the arresting wire before the wheels touch the deck. This can result in damage to the aircraft.

In the Spaghetti

Where you catch the wires.

INS

Inertial Navigation System A device that, when properly loaded and aligned, permits the pilot to determine his location anywhere on earth within a few hundred feet.

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J - "Juliet"

Jink

To maneuver violently to avoid a threat.

JO

Junior officer, usually with all the answers.

JO Junk Room

The JO state room, where all the good parties are aboard the boat

Jock, Driver

Pilot, as in "helo driver", or "fighter jock"

JP-4, JP-5

Types of jet fuel: the aroma of which makes former aviators nostalgic for flight operations.

Judy

Radio call signaling that your quarry is in sight and you are taking control of the intercept.

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K - "Kilo"

Kick the Tires and Light the Fires

Formerly, to bypass or severely shorten the required routine of physically inspecting the aircraft prior to flight. Currently meaning "let's get this aircraft preflighted and outta here, pronto"

Knife Fight in a Phone Booth

Close-in, slow-speed aerial dogfight with a nimble adversary. Often just called a "knife-fight".

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L - "Lima"

LEAPEX

A jump-through-your-*ss project, exercise, or drill. Something silly that needs to be done NOW!

Lethal Cone, Cone of Vulnerability

Area to the rear of the jet's tailpipe, into which most infra-red missile and gun attacks are ideally launched.

Lights Out

Radar off.

Lost the Bubble

Got confused or forgot what was happening.

Loading/Unloading

Increasing or decreasing angle of attack and G's

Loud Handle

Lever or grip that fires ejection seat.

LSO

Landing Signals Officer. Squadron member with considerable experience in carrier landings, responsible for assisting others onto the deck and for grading their efforts. Also known as "paddles".

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M - "Mike"

Martin-Baker Fan Club

If you eject, you're a member (a reference to the Martin-Baker company, manufacturer of ejection seats). An official list of members is maintained.

Meatball

The glideslope indication light that pilots watch when they're trapping.

Merge, Merged Plot

The point at which aircraft come into contact, after having been vectored toward each other by radar control.

MiGCAP

Combat Air Patrol over ground-attack aircraft.

Military Power

Maximum jet engine power without engaging afterburner.

Mini-Boss

The Assistant Air Boss.

Mort

"Killed" in ACM practice.

Mother, or Mom

The boat on which you are deployed, and where you launched from.

Mud-mover, Ground-pounder

Low-level attack aircraft such as the A-6 Intruder. The F/A-18 doubles as a fighter and a mud-mover.

Music

Electronic Jamming intended to deceive radar.

My Fun Meter is Pegged

Sarcastic comment for, "I am not enjoying this."

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N - "November"

NATOPS

The Naval Air Training and Operating Procedures Standardization program, responsible for rules and regulations governing the safe and correct operation of all naval aircraft.

NFO

An aviator who is an officer but not a pilot; pilots say it stands for "No Future Occupation"; also called the "walkin'-talkin' navbag."

NFWS

The Navy Fighter Weapons School, a graduate school for fighter pilots. Its universal nickname is "Top Gun".

Nice Vapes

Comment on an exciting fly-by when high speed at low altitude or high G causes dramatic vapor trails.

No-Load

An underachiever.

No Joy

Failure to make visual sighting; or inability to establish radio communications.

Nugget

A first-tour aviator.

Nylon Letdown

Ejection and subsequent parachute ride.

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O - "Oscar"

OAST

Overland Air Superiority Training. A periodic training exercise conducted over land and integrating all the elements of the carriers air wing.

On the Mouse

Talking on the flight-deck radio circuit that uses a headset resembling Mickey Mouse ears.

Opportunity to excel

A disagreeable job without the time or resources to properly complete.

Oversweep

When the F-14, on the ground, sweeps its wings to seventy-two degrees aft making it easier to store.

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P - "Papa"

Padlocked

To have a bogey firmly in your sights.

Painted

Scanned by radar.

Passing Gas

What an aerial tanker does.

Pass

The point at which fighters, closing head-on, flash past each other. Also, an attempt at landing.

Penalty Box

If you get a wave off or a bolter, that's where you go.

Pickle

A device held by the LSO that activates the "cut" light on the lens: as a verb, to drop a bomb or external fuel tank.

Pinging On

Paying close attention to; critical scrutinization

Pinkie

A landing made at twilight between the official time of sunset (or sunrise) and "real" darkness; it officially counts as a night landing, but is cheating; preferred type of "night" landing by O-4's and above.

Pit

Rear seat position of the F-14 Tomcat or F-4 Phantom.

PLAT

Pilot landing aid television. a videotape camera that records all carrier launches and recoveries.

Playmates

The pilots of other aircraft on the same mission as you.

Plumber

An inept pilot.

Pointy End

The front of a boat

Popeye

What you are when you're flying in the goo.

Power Puke or Power Barf

Projectile vomiting, a symptom of airsickness.

Pole

Control stick.

Prang

To bump, crunch, or break an aircraft.

Pucker Factor

How scary something is.

Puke

Someone who flies a different kind of aircraft than you, as in fighter puke or attack puke.

Punch Out

To eject.

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Q - "Quebec"

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R - "Romeo"

R2D2

A RIO (a reference to Luke Skywalker's robot backseater in the Star Wars movies).

Ramp Strike

Landing short in the ramp area, sometimes resulting in a crash.

Radome

Streamlined fiberglass enclosure covering a radar antenna.

RAG

Replacement Air Group. Squadron in which newly trained pilots are introduced to, and trained in, a particular aircraft type. Formally known as the FRS (Fleet Replacement Squadron).

Red Flag

A large mock air war, held quarterly by the Air Force at Nellis AFB, Nevada. Many non-Air Force assets -- Navy/Marines, Army, foreign--are invited to participate.

Rhino

Nickname for the F-4 Phantom. Also Double Ugly.

RIO

Radar Intercept Officer. Back-seat crewman in the F-14 Tomcat and F-4 Phantom. A specialized NFO

Rocket One

The skipper.

Roll 'Em

A movie ("What time's the roll 'em?")--a nightly social event in the ready room.

Roof

The flight deck on the carrier.

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S - "Sierra"

SA

Situational Awareness. An all-encompassing term for keeping track of what's happening when flying. SA involves knowing what your airplane is doing relative to its envelope, where your adversary is and what he's up to, where the ground is, the status of enemy threats on the ground, and hundreds of other variables. Loss of situational awareness is often cited as a contributing factor to many military-aviation mishaps.

SAM

Surface-to-air missile.

SAR

Search and Rescue.

Scooter

Nickname for the A-4 Skyhawk, used as a MiG simulator at Top Gun.

Scope

A RIO.

Section

Two aircraft operating together as a tactical unit.

Shoe

Short for "blackshoes," a derogatory term for nonflying personnel; aviators wear brown shoes.

Shooter

The catapult officer.

Sierra Hotel

Phonetic abbreviation for "shit hot," high praise; the pilot's favorite and all-purpose expression of approval

Smoking Hole

An airplane crash site.

Sniffer

A device on the flight deck that checks that an aircraft is broadcasting IFF transmissions.

Snuggle Up

During formation flight, to close up under the wing of another aircraft.

Sortie

A single mission by one aircraft.

Speed of Heat, Warp One

Very, very fast.

Speed Slacks, Speed Jeans

The G-suit. which applies pressure to the legs to aid in preventing blackout during high-G maneuvering.

Spooled Up

Excited.

Spud Locker

The part of a carrier where vou don't want to land; it is well down on the fantail, so if you hit it, you are way too low (at least one Navy pilot earned the nickname "Spud" for doing just that).

State

How much fuel you've got. Mother requests, "Say your state". Responded to in the form of hours and minutes of fuel onboard til you fall out of the sky ("splash"). You respond "State two plus two zero to splash" = 2 hours and 20 minutes of flying time remaining.

Stick-Throttle Interconnect

Mock-tech term for a pilot (also called just a "stick").

Sweet

Up and working.

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T - "Tango"

TACAN

TACtical Aid to Navigation. Navigation aid which provides bearing and distance (slant range) between it and an airplane.

TACTS

Tactical Aircrew Combat Training System. A system of computers, sensors, data pods, and graphic displays that permits real-time depiction of an aerial dogfight. TACTS is an integral element of Top Gun training.

Tank

Refuel

Tango Uniform

Polite phonetics for "tits up"; broken, not functioning.

Texaco

An aerial tanker.

Three Down and Locked

Landing gear down and ready for landing. A required confirmation call prior to landing at Air Force bases. Pilots who fly fixed-gear aircraft are known to modify this call as "three down and welded".

Three-Nine Line

Imaginary line across your airplane's wingspan. A primary goal in ACM is to keep your adversary in front of your three-nine line.

Throttle Back

To slow down, take it easy.

Tickets

The jobs, billets, and accomplishments you need to climb the totem pole (the tickets get "punched").

Tiger

An aggressive pilot.

Tits Machine

A good, righteous airplane. Current airplanes need not apply, this is a nostalgic term referring to birds gone by. By all accounts the F-8 Crusader was a tits machine.

Top Off

Fill up with gas.

TransPac/Lant

To cross the Pacific or Atlantic by ship or aircraft.

Trap

An arrested landing on a carrier, a helo landing into an RSD (rapid securing device)

Trick-or-Treat

If you don't make this pass. you have to tank.

Turkey

Nickname for the F-14 Tomcat (when landing, the movement of its control surfaces makes it look like a turkey).

Tweak

To fine-tune or adjust.

Twirly

Anti-collision beacon on an aircraft.

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U - "Uniform"

Up

Working, not broken.

Up on the Governor

When someone is about to have a tantrum (term comes from the device that keeps the engine from overspeeding).

Up to Speed, or Up to Snuff

To understand or to know what's going on.

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V - "Victor"

Varsity Play for the Deck

A skillful landing attempt.

VSTOL

Very Short Takeoff and Landing. Also VTOL (Vertical Takeoff and Landing) The AV-8B Harrier is a VSTOL (VTOL) aircraft. Capable of vectoring its jet thrust to shorten its take-off roll or even to rise and descend vertically.

Vulture's Row

A viewing gallery on an aircraft carrier's island where you can watch flight operations.

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W - "Whiskey"

Warm Fuzzy

Feeling of confidence or security. When things feel right.

Warthog

Universal nickname for the A-10 Thunderbolt II close air support aircraft.

Wash Out

To not make the grade at flight school.

Waveoff

When the LSO orders a pilot not to trap.

Whiskey Charlie

Phonetics for "Who cares"

Whiskey Delta

Phonetics for "weak dick", a pilot who can't cut it. Such a scurrilous term that it's almost never used.

Winder

A Sidewinder missile.

Wingman

Second pilot in a two-ship pair. responsible for ensuring that his leader's six o'clock remains clear.

Workups

Putting a ship through certain tests and exercises before going on cruise.

Woxof

Weather: zero foot ceiling obscured zero miles visibility in fog. A profitable day for the officer's club.

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X - "X-Ray"

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Y - "Yankee"

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Z - "Zulu"

Zero-Dark-Thirty

Technically a half-hour after midnight, but commonly used to describe any event that is scheduled to take place after midnight and before sunrise.

Zone 1

Minimum afterburner in the Tomcat.

Zone 5

Maximum afterburner in the Tomcat.

Zoombag

Flight suit.

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