Definition
Tone control equipment is electronic equipment that uses specific audio tones to activate, identify, or control radio navigation aids and communication systems. The tones — usually fixed audio frequencies — act as signals that switch a system on, confirm its identity, or trigger a particular function.
Plain English
It is gear that uses set audio tones as signals to turn things on, confirm identity, or trigger actions in radio and navigation systems.
Context Anchor
You may see TCE in FAA acronym lists, facility descriptions, maintenance notes, or reports about air traffic communication equipment.
Derivation
‘Tone’ comes from the Greek tonos, meaning a stretched sound or musical pitch. In radio engineering, a ‘tone’ is a steady audio frequency that can be heard or detected electronically. ‘Control equipment’ is the gear that uses those tones to manage a system.
Why Pilots Care
A pilot normally does not operate TCE directly, but if it fails, it can affect the ground radio systems used for pilot-controller communication.
Intuition Check
Do not read “tone control” as the bass, treble, or volume control on a cockpit radio. Here, it means equipment that sends control signals as tones to operate ground radio equipment.
Example Sentence 1
The technician traced the fault to the TCE, which had stopped sending the activation tone to the remote transmitter.
Example Sentence 2
Before the flight, the crew verified the tone control equipment was operating so radio checks would produce clear audio tones.