User talk:Zwicksan

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MIL-STD-2525
Take a look at NATO_Military_Symbols_for_Land_Based_Systems and let me know if that paragraph covers your concern. I'm not that experience with Military related articles, but there is a group that is at WikiProject Military history and leave a note on their talk page. (Yes, it is History, but History started one nano-second ago. :) ) . It sounds like the articles in that Project are ones that you'd be able to contribute more information on.Naraht (talk) 17:34, 1 September 2015 (UTC)
 * No, *that's not the page I was talking about, it's this one. United States Military Standard


 * It now says  MIL-STD-2525, Common Warfighting Symbology (APP-6A)
 * It should say MIL-STD-2525, Joint Military Symbology


 * (( The reference to (APP-6A) should be deleted as APP 6 is the NATO version and doesn't have relevance on this page. ))


 * P. S. The page you sent me has its share of problems that I may address later.
 * One in particular is the use of the Greek alphabet word 'Alpha' for 'A' instead of the correct military phonetic alphabet word 'Alfa'.
 * The phonetic alphabet is derived from military radio operator handbooks and is the only definitive source.
 * Check Appendix D, Radio Operator's Handbook here.
 * http://hilltoparmyradios.com/usmc-radio-ops-hdbk.pdf


 * Technically it should read A, as the phonetic alphabet is for voice communications.
 * Welcome, I've altered some of your response slightly to indicate the structral guidelines for standard communication on Wikipedia
 * First of all, I agree that that one isn't set up the way that the others are. You may want to make that change yourself, I'll be happy to spot you on that. I believe that we both agree it should change from
 * MIL-STD-2525, Common Warfighting Symbology
 * to (something like)
 * MIL-STD-2525, Joint Military Symbology
 * however the article seems to indicate that NATO Joint Military Symbology would be the preferred title.
 * You may want to look at the article NATO phonetic alphabet, it goes into *considerable* depth on the subject and history(including what words are used in non-english communications for letters that don't exist in the English Alphabet, like the Danish Æ).
 * And as I said, drop a note at Wikipedia Talk:WikiProject Military History, I think they'll be able to guide you on articles like this *much* better than I Naraht (talk) 20:01, 1 September 2015 (UTC)

I'm back. Since I'm not sure how to edit that page, I can use your offer 'to spot me on that.' NATO Joint Military Symbology is APP6 and is an entirely different animal than MIL-STD-2525 which is strictly for DOD, the United States. I'm very familiar with the NATO phonetic alphabet, but again this has nothing to do with the page I'm talking about as it's DOD, U. S.