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HomeHomeDiscussionsDiscussionsiFly Wish-ListiFly Wish-ListCenter Frequencies Center Frequencies
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9/25/2015 8:56 PM
 

For those of us that frequently fly cross country and use Flight Following, the access to the closest Center frequency is a necessity. My old Garmin Pilot III gave the location from my present position to the closest antenna. With this information and knowing the direction of travel, a decision on which frequency to call Center was easy. Without this available I have to call Flight Following for this information or carry additional paper to look up the frequency. Please consider adding Center frequencies to the selection of "Nearest" choices.

 
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9/25/2015 10:31 PM
 

i agree, but until then, click on the nearest IFR airport.

 
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9/26/2015 10:36 AM
 

Thoughts:

After the initial callup, you should not need to look up any frequencies and certainly should not have to ask your FF controller for one. When a controller ships you, he will say something like "Bugsmasher 1234 contact Chicago Center on 124.2" Once in a while, VFR or IFR, a controller has forgotten to give me a repeater change (""Bugsmasher 1234 change to my frequency 124.2"). Here you can either ask someone for a relay on your current frequency or look up a new frequency to try.

As OldPilot suggests, airport info is a good place to look. Pick a non-towered airport, though, or you may get a TRACON frequency and have to ask them for Center. Almost as easy, pull up a low altitude chart. The castellated box nearest to your current position shows the frequency that ATC wants us bugsmashers to use. Either way, no need for paper. ARTCC jurisdiction boundaries are also shown.

I like the NRST pages in the Garmin navigators too, but the numbers you see there are not a silver bullet either. For a given lat/long they list all of the pertinent ARTCC sector frequencies. So when you pick one for a callup you may get a controller for the high altitude sector that overlays your location, again necessitating a frequency change to someone else. Sectors are staffed according to workload, so there is no way to know which frequency is right for the current sector configuration. That's why Garmin has to list all of them. (IIRC the max number of aircraft that a single controller can work is 16. Sector configurations can change several times in a day.)

So you already have a couple of non-paper ways to skin the cat. The castellated box and the airport information lookup will both probably yield a better result than getting a NRST ARTCC list.

 
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9/26/2015 11:59 AM
 

As Tinker already suggested, when I want a Center Freq, I switch to the Low Alt Enroute chart and pan around until I find the ARTCC Sector freq box. If it's the wrong freq or if you're low in someone's approach airspace, they'll tell you and give you the right freq.

Presumes one has the IFR subscription. (Or Avare's IFR charts.)

 
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9/26/2015 5:31 PM
 
I agree with Gary. Flight Following gets more and more popular, I use it almost every flight out of the local area here in the Reno area. I think that low sector freqs were never included on the Sectional Maps in the "early days" was because FF was not commonly available to GA and besides "why would you put an IFR freq on a VFR map". When it did become available, the Sectionals were never changed, maybe for the same reasoning. VFR Flight Following is now very common service provided by ATC and I use it in lieu of filing Flight Plans on our TransCon vacations every summer. (Note: I said I don't file Flight Plans, I did not say I don't get pre-departure briefings from FSS.) I too, would like an easy way to get my current position Low Sector Freqs without digging too deep into the menus. I don't think I should be required to go to a IFR Low Map to get a freq for VFR Flight Following Service. Dan
 
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