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LAX ... why the X?

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Originally posted by: Haircut
My local airport, Manchester has a really obscure code: MAN
I wonder how they got that one?

they must have been smoking the whacky the day that they came up with that one 😉
 
Originally posted by: aphexII
Why the hell is Orlando, MCO?

OIA used to be McCoy Air Force Base, for B-52's. It closed in the 60's (I think), and what better airport to use for tourists than a huge, closed down, air force base with long runways?
 
Originally posted by: Rallispec
Originally posted by: notfred
Cause two leters isn't enough to uniquely identify all our airports.

San Francisco: SFO
San Jose: SJC
Watsonville: WVI

They need a 3 letter abbreviation, they try to come up w/ something that is easily associated w/ the cit ythe airport is in.

yeah, i get this.. i'm still wondering where the X comes from though.. how did they choose that letter?

It doesn't "stand" for anything. It's just a unique three letter code.

Hell, I fly from GKY to T40 occasionally.... tell me what those are supposed to stand for?
(At least, I think it's T40...)
 
Originally posted by: dude
Originally posted by: Rallispec
thats what i was thinking too.. but how do you get an X from international?

HATS - Hong Kong International Airport

Okay, if you want to get technical about it, all American airports are really a four-letter code beginning with "K".

So we're talking about KLAX, KORD, etc... but the K is pretty much understood in the US.
 
Edmonton International - YEG

All Canadian airports start with a Y, no idea where the other two letters come from. Edmonton G...
 
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