Definition
An unstaffed ground-based radio facility that gives pilots a way to talk to a Flight Service Station (FSS) from areas where direct radio contact with the FSS would otherwise be out of range. The RCO transmits and receives on published frequencies and relays the communication to the controlling FSS over a dedicated link, allowing the pilot to file or close flight plans, get weather, or pick up clearances.
Plain English
A remote radio relay box on the ground that lets you talk to Flight Service even when you're too far away to reach them directly. You call on the published frequency and your voice is carried back to the Flight Service Station for you.
Context Anchor
Pilots see RCO frequencies in airport communication listings, especially for airports without a control tower, where they may need to contact flight service or get help before departure or after arrival.
Derivation
Remote means at a distance from the main station. Communications outlet means a point where communications go in and out — like a power outlet, but for radio. Together: a radio access point located away from the Flight Service Station it serves.
Why Pilots Care
They let pilots at uncontrolled airports obtain weather reports, file plans, and receive clearances without a tower being present on the field.
Analogy
An RCO is like a remote speaker and microphone placed where pilots can reach it by radio, while the person answering is somewhere else.
Intuition Check
Do not assume “remote” means unused or automatic. Here it means the radio outlet is away from the person or facility you are contacting.
Example Sentence 1
After landing at the non-towered field, the pilot tuned the published RCO frequency and called Flight Service to close the VFR flight plan.
Example Sentence 2
Even though the airport had no tower, the pilot was able to receive an IFR clearance through the nearby RCO.