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Steve 12th April 2017 22:18

Test Thread
 
:):D:eek::rolleyes:

Steve 17th April 2017 20:40

test test test

doncontrols 18th April 2017 11:49

working working working :D

tony allen 26th April 2017 13:24

rodger over an out

Bliksem 26th April 2017 17:09

Quote:

Originally Posted by tony allen (Post 1234)
rodger over an out

That is NOT the way to spell "Roger"!

(Can this please be classified as the first argument on the "Bitch a Little if it Makes You Feel Better" forum?) :D

tony allen 26th April 2017 18:27

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bliksem (Post 1255)
That is NOT the way to spell "Roger"!

(Can this please be classified as the first argument on the "Bitch a Little if it Makes You Feel Better" forum?) :D

yes sir your right sir sorry sir won't happen again sir .thats why left the other place sir
cheers to you sir ."all under my breath of course " tony

Varley 27th April 2017 13:05

Well Mayday aint' the right spolling of M'aiderz neither.

Bitch a lot, feel better a lot.(Sad a lot).

John Rogers 11th May 2017 21:27

Over and out not right either, it's Over or Out, never over and out.

Gulpers 11th May 2017 23:46

OVER− My transmission is ended; I expect a response.
OUT− The conversation is ended and no response is expected.
ROGER− I have received all of your last transmission. It should not be used to answer a question requiring a yes or a no answer.

Tom Alexander 12th May 2017 08:57

Now is that Rodger the Doger, or Roger the Dodger -- let's make up our minds chaps and talk Inglish proper as it is meant to be spoke !! :curtain_call:

Bliksem 12th May 2017 16:55

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tom Alexander (Post 2873)
Now is that Rodger the Doger, or Roger the Dodger -- let's make up our minds chaps and talk Inglish proper as it is meant to be spoke !! :curtain_call:

Rite, said Fred!

BobClay 12th May 2017 18:25

If you have a cockpit with a Captain Oveur, co-pilot named Roger and engineer named Victor you have a formula for confusion: :sweat:

https://youtu.be/NfDUkR3DOFw

Naytikos 15th June 2017 19:57

Now that was a funny film! "What's my vector, Victor?"


Funny how 'Roger' has hung over from an earlier phonetic alphabet; strictly speaking we should now say "Romeo"

pompeyfan 19th June 2017 15:18

Airplane II, Captain Oveur, Navigator Unger, First Officer Dunn. Unger said that technically Dunn was under Oveur, and I was over Dunn :jester:

Richard 19th June 2017 16:36

Signal good, standing by.

BobClay 19th June 2017 17:50

dit dit dit dit dah
dah dah dit dah
dit dit dah dah dah

:big_tongue:

Ron Stringer 25th June 2017 23:54

Back in the mid-1960s at Ras Lanuf, Libya, the refinery and port comms systems were maintained by a Brit whose first name was Roger. Most of the port administrators and refinery supervisory staff were Americans, as were the port Pilots. They seemed very amused by Roger's British accent and on one occasion that we were in port (well, anchored to pick up the end of the pipeline) Roger was doing radio checks on the port VHF radio system for most of the day. Every time he called us or one of the other vessels in the vicinity, the Americans on board would respond with, "Roger-Roger, Roger", followed by loud guffaws of laughter.

We didn't see what was so funny about it (especially after the first ten or so times it happened) and I'm sure Roger wouldn't have been amused.

Varley 27th June 2017 10:25

Just because I asked about lipstick you think you can call me Romeo?

Farmer John 27th June 2017 13:42

Quote:

Originally Posted by Varley (Post 5466)
Just because I asked about lipstick you think you can call me Romeo?

Perhaps it would be unkind it was because everyone was sick of "Roger"ing you.

Varley 27th June 2017 18:13

As long as you keep up the scourgeing and don't loosen the nipple clamps.

Binnacle 27th June 2018 07:21

Over and oot

King Ratt 27th June 2018 07:33

Quote:

Originally Posted by tony allen (Post 1234)
rodger over an out

It’s Roger, out. Only TV progs and films say over and out. Out means the exchange is complete, no answer required.

DAB 27th June 2018 09:43

The days of grammar have long since went!

BobClay 27th June 2018 10:33

Both my Granmas have long since gone … :eek:

Tmac1720 27th June 2018 13:32

you rang M'Lord?


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