ulnaf Posted December 6, 2014 Posted December 6, 2014 (edited) FOX and RIFLE, MADSPIKE etc. I brevity code knows that is used in the United States Air Force. But it is not heard the brevity code of Soviet version. Who has you know about the Soviet version of brevity code? English is not good. Grammar might funny. Sorry .......:cry: --------------------------------- ASUS Sabertooth 990FX AMD PhenomeⅡ×6 1100T 3.8 GHz O/C 120 GB SSD + 1TB×3 HDD 16 Gb Ram DDR3-1333 Mhz Nvıdıa GTX 680 4Gb TrackIR 5 + Saitek X55 Rhino Flight Controller Windows 7 Pro 64-bit DCS:A-10C/P-51D/BS2/FC3/UH-1/Mi-8/MiG-21bis Falcon4.0 BMS X-Plane 10 Edited December 7, 2014 by ulnaf
fixen Posted December 6, 2014 Posted December 6, 2014 This is what I found. Not sure If its good information. - "pusk" (launch): releasing any guided or unguided weapon - "ushla"/"poshla" ("gone"/"gone away"): refers to a rocket/missile (feminine) released - "sbros" (release): emergency drop of tanks, bombs or other munition. Unlike in Lock on, seldom if ever used when releasing live bombs ("pusk" would be more appropriate). - "nebo" (sky): I am looking/focusing on an appropriate air target (on radar or or visually) - "zemlya": I am looking for an appropriate ground target - "vizhu tsel' ": target in sight - "poshel" (go): order or confirmation to engage - "rabotayu" (I'm working on): engagement clear and weapons ready to release. All these words can be combined with the unit's internal slang, codewords and situational context. E.g. "belaya poshla" ("white gone") can mean a live semi-active missile release, while "krasnaya poshla" ("red gone") can mean a training round electronic launch (dummies are typically painted bright red). What I read was that there isn't an official brevity, but again, I don't know myself 2
JorgeIII Posted December 6, 2014 Posted December 6, 2014 Will be good to know but hard to memorize! AKA TANGO-117. DCS Modules: ALL. I7 6700k @ 4.9 GHz / 32 GB DDR4 @ 3.2 GHz / 950 Pro m.2 + 4xSSDs / Gigabyte 1080TI 11 GB OC / 48" 4K Curved Samsung TV / TM Warthog Hotas / TM TPR rudder pedals / Track IR. Private pilot and sailplane pilot in RL.
ulnaf Posted December 7, 2014 Author Posted December 7, 2014 (edited) This is what I found. Not sure If its good information. - "pusk" (launch): releasing any guided or unguided weapon - "ushla"/"poshla" ("gone"/"gone away"): refers to a rocket/missile (feminine) released - "sbros" (release): emergency drop of tanks, bombs or other munition. Unlike in Lock on, seldom if ever used when releasing live bombs ("pusk" would be more appropriate). - "nebo" (sky): I am looking/focusing on an appropriate air target (on radar or or visually) - "zemlya": I am looking for an appropriate ground target - "vizhu tsel' ": target in sight - "poshel" (go): order or confirmation to engage - "rabotayu" (I'm working on): engagement clear and weapons ready to release. All these words can be combined with the unit's internal slang, codewords and situational context. E.g. "belaya poshla" ("white gone") can mean a live semi-active missile release, while "krasnaya poshla" ("red gone") can mean a training round electronic launch (dummies are typically painted bright red). What I read was that there isn't an official brevity, but again, I don't know myself Wow! Thanks fixen! This is great information! You helped me out a lot :thumbup: --------------------------------- ASUS Sabertooth 990FX AMD PhenomeⅡ×6 1100T 3.8 GHz O/C 120 GB SSD + 1TB×3 HDD 16 Gb Ram DDR3-1333 Mhz Nvıdıa GTX 680 4Gb TrackIR 5 + Saitek X55 Rhino Flight Controller Windows 7 Pro 64-bit DCS:A-10C/P-51D/BS2/FC3/UH-1/Mi-8/MiG-21bis Falcon4.0 BMS X-Plane 10 Edited December 7, 2014 by ulnaf
ulnaf Posted December 7, 2014 Author Posted December 7, 2014 Thank you for reply, JorgeIII Though certainly difficult, I likely useful in multiplayer. I’ll give it a try. --------------------------------- ASUS Sabertooth 990FX AMD PhenomeⅡ×6 1100T 3.8 GHz O/C 120 GB SSD + 1TB×3 HDD 16 Gb Ram DDR3-1333 Mhz Nvıdıa GTX 680 4Gb TrackIR 5 + Saitek X55 Rhino Flight Controller Windows 7 Pro 64-bit DCS:A-10C/P-51D/BS2/FC3/UH-1/Mi-8/MiG-21bis Falcon4.0 BMS X-Plane 10
Roadrunner Posted December 8, 2014 Posted December 8, 2014 from another thread: Hi. The brevity code system in Russian AF is very weak. Only some "the words" are known. I will give to you an english transliteration for the terms. VYSOKOE - radar emission. STARTY - Settings for datalink system. The system is used for command guidance for ground controlled intercept mission type. Typical phrase is - '435. Vypoltyaite starty.' PRIBOY - the message is given in air if a pilot don't knows its actual navigational position. Link English is not good. Grammar might funny. Sorry ....... guess your english is better than the japanese of 99% of the forum users here, including me ;) regards, RR [sIGPIC][/sIGPIC] "There's nothing to be gained by second guessing yourself. You can't remake the past, so look ahead... or risk being left behind." Noli Timere Messorem "No matter how fast light travels, it finds the darkness has always been there first, and is waiting for it." Terry Pratchett
WildBillKelsoe Posted September 22, 2017 Posted September 22, 2017 davai davai come on come on zapusk radio turn radio Vkl on Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk AWAITING ED NEW DAMAGE MODEL IMPLEMENTATION FOR WW2 BIRDS Fat T is above, thin T is below. Long T is faster, Short T is slower. Open triangle is AWACS, closed triangle is your own sensors. Double dash is friendly, Single dash is enemy. Circle is friendly. Strobe is jammer. Strobe to dash is under 35 km. HDD is 7 times range key. Radar to 160 km, IRST to 10 km. Stay low, but never slow.
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