Yes, it's the same.Buckimion said:I've long been used to using MCO as the code for the Orlando airport but lately I'm seeing OIA more often. Is this the same airport or a different one?
Just to be a little picky, IAH is George Bush IntercontinentalseashoreCM said:snip
IAH is the larger Houston Intercontinental Airport.
snip
Yes, Denver's old, defunct Stapleton International Airport was DEN. In 1995, Stapleton was decommissioned, and its DEN designator code transferred to the brand new Denver International Airport the same day.seashoreCM said:DEN has been Denver's Stapleton Airport, between downtown and Denver Int'l, and which no longer serves commercial air traffic. (Is it still an airport at all?) If Denver Int'l is still commonly called DIA it probably should have kept the code DIA which it had originally. Unless confusion continued to exist with IAD which is Dulles Airport outside Washington DC.
Well alright! I finally know where MCO comes from! I never researched it but always wondering how they got MCO out of Orlando International. Thank you Horace!Horace Horsecollar said:It's actually short for McCoy, from when the airport was McCoy Air Force Base.
That's because it stands for Moisant Stock Yards, actually. John Moisant was a well-known early aviator. He died in a crash there on NYE 1910 while practicing for the Michelin Cup Race. A stockyard was later built on the land, and since the area was well-known as the place where Moisant had died, the owners named the stockyards after him. The city later bought the land to build an airport, which opened in 1946. (The original airport, NEW, is Lakefront Airport, which is still used for gen'l aviation.) In 2001, MSY was re-named for Louis Armstrong. Other than cabbies and traffic reporters, most locals calls it New Orleans Int'l, though old-timers, like meThe three letter codes are really obtuse in many cases. Louis Armstrong (New Orleans) is MSY sure doesn't derive too well from Moisant Field.
... and Spirit Airlines as "NK," and AirTran as "FL."salmoneous said:OIA is apparently the designation for Ourilandia, Brazil
On the really geeky travel boards, you will see Southwest Airlines referred to by their official airline designation of "WN."
seashoreCM said:NYC is sometimes used to refer to Laguardia, Kennedy, and Newark as a group.
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rantnnravin said:The distinctions are made thus:
LGA= LaGuardia (Queens)
JFK=Kennedy (Brooklyn)
NWK= Newark (New Jersey)
rantnnravin said:The distinctions are made thus:
LGA= LaGuardia (Queens)
JFK=Kennedy (Brooklyn)
NWK= Newark (New Jersey)
The US Navy reserved N, so there are US military airfields, but not commercial airports, that begin with N.gw_lit said:Airport codes in the U.S. do not use N or K as a first letter, thus Nashville is BNA, Kansas City is MCI, etc.
rantnnravin said:The distinctions are made thus:
JFK=Kennedy (Brooklyn)
JFK is actually in Queens.
Horace Horsecollar said:The US Navy reserved N, so there are US military airfields, but not commercial airports, that begin with N.
The US Government reserved W and K for broadcast stations, so US airports supposedly couldn't use W and K. However, there are airports in former US territiories that are now US states that use K. For example, KOA is Kona, Hawaii, and KDK is Kodiak, Alaska. There are military and general aviation airports in the US that begin with W, but I'm not aware of any US airports with commercial service that begin with W.
The three-letter code BNA is for Berry Field NAshville, named in honor of Colonel Harry S. Berry, State Administrator of the WPA and administrator of the airport project for Nashville in the 1930s.
The three-letter code MCI is for Mid-Continent International, which, during early design phase, was going to be the name of what later became Kansas City International Airport.