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Icao identifiers – BendixKing KLX 135A - Pilots Guide User Manual

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KLX 135A Pilot’s Guide Data Base

2-3 Effective Date 5/95

006-08789-0000 Rev 0

Data Base

Chapter 2

2.3. ICAO IDENTIFIERS

Waypoints are stored in the KLX 135A data base almost exclusively
by their ICAO identifiers. ICAO (International Civil Aviation
Organization) is an internationally accepted reference for the data. In
almost all cases the proper ICAO identifiers may be taken directly
from Jeppesen Sanderson or government aeronautical charts.

Airport identifiers in the contiguous United States, Alaska, and
Canada are special cases in the ICAO system. Many airport identi-
fiers for these areas have four letters beginning with a prefix letter
that corresponds to the geographic area in which it is located. The
prefix letter for the contiguous U.S. is “K”. Thus, the identifier for
Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport is KDFW, not DFW (which
would be identical to the VOR identifier). Likewise, the identifier for
Orlando Executive Airport is KORL while the VOR identifier is ORL.
The prefix letter for Canada is “C” and for Alaska is “P”.

NOTE: There are several exceptions in Alaska. In many cases, air-
ports with three letter identifiers receive the prefix “P”, but there are
many that don’t. The most reliable method of determining an Alaska
airport identifier is to look it up from the airport name or city. See sec-
tion 3.7.4, “Selecting Waypoints by Name or City”.

Incidentally, you can program the KLX 135A to default to a certain
letter (such as “K”) when you are entering a waypoint identifier. See

section 3.4.2, “

Data Entry” to learn about this handy feature.

Not all airport identifiers receive the prefix letter. Airport identifiers
which are combinations of letters and numbers do not apply to the
prefix rule. Examples of airport identifiers not using the prefix are
3C2, 7TX6, and M33.

So remember, if you are entering or looking for an airport
identifier that is all letters (no numbers) then it will begin with a
“K” prefix in the contiguous U.S., a “P” in Alaska (in some
cases), or a “C” in Canada. If there are numbers in the identifier
then a prefix is not used. For other areas of the world the airport
identifier stored in the KLX 135A data base is identical to how it
is charted.