GravityHater
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 12, 2004
- Posts
- 1,168
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I don't have a copy, but it sounds like a military high altitude penetration. Lots of domestic airports with significant military traffic will have a Hi-ILS or HI-TACAN approach. They're just not normally published where civilians see them. The DOD books have them.GravityHater said:For example what is an "HI-ILS/DME RWY 8"
ref TJSJ San Juan, P.R.
Hmmmmm, so all the airports I'm flying to which start with PA aren't 'merican ??? I suppose that also goes for all the airports in Hawaii which start with PH ?GravityHater said:I call them 'foreign' because the idenfier all start with "M"and in my book if they aint a "K" they isnt 'merican.
Sir, an unfortunate oversight on our part. In future please forward all you income tax directly to my personal address, where it should have been sent in the first place. We apologize for any inconvenience!A Squared said:So tell me this, If I'm not in the US, why the hell am i paying a fifth of my earnings to the US government?
LOL! that's good!GravityHater said:Sir, an unfortunate oversight on our part. In future please forward all you income tax directly to my personal address, where it should have been sent in the first place. We apologize for any inconvenience!
Each region gets its letter. The Lower 48 get "K" while much of the Pacific gets "P," so there's PHNL for Honolulu and PANK for Anchorage and so forth. In some places (not the lower 48), the first two letters will give you country or some other subset of the broader area: PAxx is Alaska, PHxx is Hawaii, RJxx is Japan, RKxx is South Korea, EDxx is Germany, EGxx is the UK, and so forth. There are references out there that can give you the whole breakdown, but I don't have a link handy.I'd thought each country got its own letter but apparently not.