RussR
En-Route
Been flying down near (and over) Mexico a lot the past few weeks, and hearing lots of the XAxxx callsigns got me thinking. When I hear ATC tripping over their tongues trying to get out something like "Charlie Foxtrot Golf Foxtrot Alpha" or "X-Ray Alpha Quebec Yankee Zulu", instead of something easier like "One Two Three Alpha Bravo", it makes me wonder why the U.S. uses numbers but (it seems) few other countries do.
I know the UK is just letters, as are (most?) other European countries.
I know that some countries have a number in their prefix (like S5 is Slovenia and 6Y is Jamaica), but other than the prefix, how prevalent are numbers in the actual registration?
Some clicking around on flightradar24.com didn't show very many numbers in registrations.
So, why aren't numbers used more often in airplane registrations? Some historical reason? After all, numbers are the same in many languages whereas the letters are different. Is it my English-centric viewpoint that makes it seem like numbers are easier and quicker to pronounce? Are there other countries that use numbers as well?
Or is it just because they aren't needed? After all, a single-letter prefix like "C" for Canada, using 4 more letters (as registrations seem to be 5 characters in "most" countries) still gives you 450,000 combinations. Adding numbers brings that to 1.6 million combinations.
I know the UK is just letters, as are (most?) other European countries.
I know that some countries have a number in their prefix (like S5 is Slovenia and 6Y is Jamaica), but other than the prefix, how prevalent are numbers in the actual registration?
Some clicking around on flightradar24.com didn't show very many numbers in registrations.
So, why aren't numbers used more often in airplane registrations? Some historical reason? After all, numbers are the same in many languages whereas the letters are different. Is it my English-centric viewpoint that makes it seem like numbers are easier and quicker to pronounce? Are there other countries that use numbers as well?
Or is it just because they aren't needed? After all, a single-letter prefix like "C" for Canada, using 4 more letters (as registrations seem to be 5 characters in "most" countries) still gives you 450,000 combinations. Adding numbers brings that to 1.6 million combinations.