Definition
Aircraft radio equipment that transmits and receives voice communications on Very High Frequency (VHF) bands, typically between 118.000 and 136.975 MHz, used for air-to-ground and air-to-air communication with air traffic control, flight service stations, and other aircraft.
Plain English
The radio in the aircraft that lets the pilot talk to controllers, ground stations, and other pilots on the standard aviation voice frequencies.
Context Anchor
Seen in training syllabi, aircraft equipment lists, cockpit radio use, and lessons on communicating with control towers or other aircraft.
Derivation
VHF stands for Very High Frequency, referring to radio waves between 30 and 300 MHz. The aviation voice band sits in the upper portion of this range. VHF was chosen for aviation because it travels in straight lines, gives clear voice quality, and is largely free of the long-range interference that affects lower frequencies.
Why Pilots Care
It provides the primary, line-of-sight voice link for clearances, traffic advisories, and emergency calls.
Intuition Check
VHF communications equipment does not mean any electronic device used for communication. It specifically means aviation radio equipment that works in the VHF voice radio band.
Example Sentence 1
Before taxi, the student tuned the VHF communications equipment to the ground control frequency and requested a taxi clearance.
Example Sentence 2
After landing, the pilot switched the VHF communications equipment to the common traffic advisory frequency.