Start with routine calls
Routine call practice helps you build microphone confidence before Mayday, Pan-Pan, Securite, DSC alerting, or urgency and safety scenarios.
A routine radio check is a good way to practice disciplined VHF speech: call the station, identify your vessel, make the request, listen, acknowledge, and clear the channel without clutter.
| Step | Practice focus | Common mistake |
|---|---|---|
| Opening call | Called station, called station, this is your vessel name repeated as required | Speaking too fast or clipping the vessel name. |
| Request | Ask for a radio check and wait for the response | Adding unnecessary detail on the calling channel. |
| Close | Acknowledge readability and end cleanly | Forgetting to clear the exchange. |
Routine call practice helps you build microphone confidence before Mayday, Pan-Pan, Securite, DSC alerting, or urgency and safety scenarios.
Radio procedure is partly a speaking skill. Use the Marine Radio simulator to record locally, replay your own call, and compare it with the expected structure.
Use revision tools and training centre guidance for practice. Keep real VHF transmissions purposeful, brief, and appropriate.
No. A radio check is routine. Mayday, Pan-Pan, and Securite have different priorities and structures.
The Marine Radio simulator is designed for local spoken practice and replay in supported browsers.
Access is course-specific unless a bundle clearly says otherwise. Each brand stays on its own domain inside the Compass Revision Network.