Five by Five
Where does the term ‘five by five’ come from? I first heard it on ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’, but have since heard it in a military setting. The context on ‘Buffy’ is:
How are you doing? Five by five!
I take it to mean something like ‘fine’, ‘great’ or something similar. Does anyone know how it came to be?
Michael (unregistered)
January 31, 2006, 1:27am
In Alien, Ferro, a dropship pilot, states "We're in the pipe, five by five."
This means in laymen's terms "We're on track and read you loud and clear."
It's usually a military term. There are 5 levels of reception, five being the best. People say stuff like: "Testing, testing, one two three four, five by five." (Or four by four, etc)
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Bryan (unregistered)
October 5, 2004, 8:25pm
That's military jargon, though I've read it in an old CB operations guide. There are two scales to measure how well you are hearing someone on the radio: Strength and clarity of transmision. Since its a five-point scale, a signal of 'five by five' would be the optimum values. Something worse would be 'two by two' for instance.
So the comment of 'five by five' in this case would indicate that they were feeling in the optimum best of health.
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speedwell2
October 7, 2004, 8:05am
all your base are belong to us!
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porsche
January 31, 2006, 1:20pm
Brian and Michael have pretty much hit it on the head. Do note, however that I don't think it's necessarily military. It applies in all forms of radio communication. It is actually an officially documented expression for all licensed FCC radio communications, ham radio, aircraft communications, etc.
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Bryan (unregistered)
June 30, 2006, 11:41pm
It refers to signal strength and clarity, both rated on a five point scale.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Five_by_five
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neil
October 6, 2004, 7:25pm
I first heard it in James Camerons' Aliens movie. The female transport pilot says the following during takoff,
"In the pipe, five by five."
It has since been used in the game StarCraft by Blizzard Entertainment. The pilots of the Human shuttle's are female and say this sometimes when you click on them.
Buffy was probably just using it because it became sort of a geek thing to say after the StarCraft inclusion.
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chris.kruger
October 17, 2010, 8:59pm
The other commentators are correct about the 5 by 5 part. I do believe the, 'in the pipe' part refers to being in transit to land. I heard the term originally from Pilots referring to the visualisation produced by the client end of a TLS (Transponder Landing System). The TLS largely automates that landing process.
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Jackal (unregistered)
February 21, 2006, 1:00pm
US Air Force lingo:
Q: What's your situation?
A: "five by five" or simply "5 by"
Meaning: in position and ready
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Mattchu
March 16, 2013, 4:14am
It's also in the Freeverse game Wingnuts.
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pirobizen
October 27, 2004, 9:58pm
take off every 'zig with liberty.
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Hudson
June 22, 2012, 12:01am
"Five by five", also used in french for instance ("Cinq sur cinq"), just means that you receives clearly a transmission. It is also used when you want to say that you understand an order.
I heard this in many many movies. *
But THE quote with this expression is in Aliens (Alien 2) "We are in the pipe, five by five". And used after in Starcraft in reference to Aliens.
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