Filing a NOTAM for a Rocket Launch: Difference between revisions
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I strongly encourage you to learn the ICAO International Telephony Alphabet. I learned it in the US Army, but I taught it through all of my years of IT and technical support. I insist that it is an essential communications tool and that it makes you sound more professional and more trustworthy. Learning the alphabet is useful in all aspects of communicating with the FAA, military flight operations, and in fact anyone you must communicate with on the phone or radio. | I strongly encourage you to learn the ICAO International Telephony Alphabet. I learned it in the US Army, but I taught it through all of my years of IT and technical support. I insist that it is an essential communications tool and that it makes you sound more professional and more trustworthy. Learning the alphabet is useful in all aspects of communicating with the FAA, military flight operations, and in fact anyone you must communicate with on the phone or radio. | ||
<div class="aside">The NOTAM system software permits the agent to pull up a recent NOTAM and make a copy; editing in thew new times and dates. If you filed a NOTAM last month, the agent would appreciate that NOTAM ID so they can use it as a template for your new NOTAM. | <div class="aside">The NOTAM system software permits the agent to pull up a recent NOTAM and make a copy; editing in thew new times and dates. If you filed a NOTAM last month, the agent would appreciate that NOTAM ID so they can use it as a template for your new NOTAM. Usually they can only pull up recent NOTAMs that are from the past 30 days or less. If no recent NOTAM is available for reference you are going to tell the agent that this is for an UNMANNED ROCKET launch. | ||
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Here is sample NOTAM language from my experiance. | |||
!ALM 01/009 BWS AIRSPACE UNMANNED ROCKET | !ALM 01/009 BWS AIRSPACE UNMANNED ROCKET | ||
Revision as of 19:06, 1 January 2023
I strongly encourage you to learn the ICAO International Telephony Alphabet. I learned it in the US Army, but I taught it through all of my years of IT and technical support. I insist that it is an essential communications tool and that it makes you sound more professional and more trustworthy. Learning the alphabet is useful in all aspects of communicating with the FAA, military flight operations, and in fact anyone you must communicate with on the phone or radio.
Here is sample NOTAM language from my experiance.
!ALM 01/009 BWS AIRSPACE UNMANNED ROCKET WITHIN AN AREA DEFINED AS 1.0NM RADIUS OF BWS001006(4.6NM NNW ALM) SFC-17000FT YYMMDDHHMM-YYMMDDHHMM
The term UNMANNED ROCKET is the key identifier or subject of the NOTAM. BWS is the airspace designated for a nearby airport, and BWS001006 is a location coordinate as a radial from that airport. This helps a pilot plan a flight through the area with an understanding of your launch location with respect to a standard navigation point (that airport). That radial will be called out in your COA. The remaining information is the authorized altitude SFCSurface-17000FT.
