Current Designations of
Copyright © 2003-2005 Andreas
Parsch
3 Sources
The current designation
system for
According to the rules,
all aircraft operated by the
The purpose of this
article is to present an overview of the aircraft designation system together
with notes explaining the details and some exceptions. The missile designation
system is covered in the article on Current
Designations of U.S. Unmanned Military Aerospace Vehicles, and the actual
process of allocating a designation is explained on the page about Allocation
of Official Aerospace Vehicle MDS Designations.
A
|
Examples: |
|
|
F |
|
- |
15 |
E |
|
Eagle |
|
|
|
E |
A |
|
- |
6 |
B |
|
Prowler |
|
|
N |
K |
C |
|
- |
135 |
A |
|
Stratotanker |
|
|
Y |
R |
A |
H |
- |
66 |
A |
|
Comanche |
|
|
|
M |
|
Q |
- |
9 |
A |
|
Predator |
|
|
|
|
C |
H |
- |
47 |
F |
|
Chinook |
|
|
Y |
|
F |
|
- |
23 |
A |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
V |
- |
22 |
A |
|
Osprey * |
|
|
|
EK |
A |
|
- |
3 |
B |
|
Skywarrior * |
|
|
(6) |
(3) |
(2) |
(1) |
|
(4) |
(5) |
|
|
*Note: The last two MDS
designations are not strictly conforming to the regulations, as will be shown
below.
In the following section,
each of the six elements is explained in detail. For all letter symbols a year
range is given in brackets to document when this particular symbol is/was
valid. If one of the bounds is given as a range (e.g. 1978/86), this means that
I don't know the respective year more exactly.
(1) Vehicle Type: All aircraft which are not
"normal" aeroplanes (i.e. powered, fixed-wing, heavier-than-air,
non-VTOL, manned, atmospheric aircraft), use one of the following symbols to
designate the type of aerospace craft:
Notes for Vehicle Type
Symbol:
(2) Basic Mission: The letter to the left of the
dash (or the vehicle type symbol) designates the basic mission of the aircraft.
Because both basic mission letter in "normal" and vehicle type letter
in "special" aircraft are immediately left of the dash (and define in
which series the MDS is numbered, see section (4) below), both groups of
letters have to be distinct to avoid ambiguities, but this rule was violated
with the introduction of the S-for-Spaceplane vehicle type symbol.
Designations, which include a vehicle type symbol, must also include at
least one basic or modified mission (see section (3) below) symbol to designate
the mission of the "special" aircraft (i.e., the plain V-22A designation
is not conforming to the regulation). The following basic mission symbols are
defined:
Notes for Basic
Mission Symbol:
(3) Modified Mission: To the left of the basic mission
symbol an optional modified mission letter can be used, when an aircraft is
used for a different purpose than originally designed. The regulations say that
not more than one modified mission letter can be used, but this rule has been
violated a few times, e.g. in the EKA-3B designation. Designations, which
include a vehicle type symbol, can optionally omit the basic mission letter if
a modified mission letter is used instead (as shown by the MQ-9A example). The
modified mission symbols are in general the same as the basic mission symbols,
but add a few more letters. The following modified mission symbols are defined:
Notes for Modified
Mission Symbol:
(4) Design Number: Each vehicle type and basic
mission symbol is used to form a separate series of design numbers. E.g., all
helicopters are designated in a single numerical sequence, while
"normal" aircraft are designated in separate series according to
their basic mission. According to the instructions, the numbers in each series
are to be assigned in strict numerical sequence without reference to
manufacturers' model numbers and/or existing numbers in other MDS series.
However, this rule is rather often violated nowadays, e.g. by using the
manufacturer's model number (e.g. KC-767A), retaining the number when a new
designation in another series is assigned (e.g. the production variant of the
X-35 was designated F-35, although the next number in the F-series was 24), or
allocating "special" numbers (e.g. X-50A, T-6A). For more information
on these and other examples, see article on Non-Standard
DOD Aircraft Designations. Also, sometimes numbers are skipped in one
series because they are in use at the same time in another series (e.g. C-34
was skipped to "avoid confusion" with T-34).
(5) Series Letter: Variants of a basic aircraft type
are designated by a suffix letter. The first model always receives suffix
"A" and subsequent series letters are to be assigned in strict sequence
(omitting "I" and "O" to avoid confusion with numerals
"1" and "0"). The series letter is actually a mandatory
component of a conforming MDS, and therefore "plain" designations
like "F-16" always designate the general type of aircraft and never a
specific model. Of course, the sequence rule is often ignored and there are
many designations with out-of-sequence suffixes (e.g. to designate a specific
customer, like the "N" in F-16N designated "Navy") or even
"special" suffixes as in AV-8B(R)+. It is not well defined, which
kind of modifications actually mandate the assignment of a new series letter.
In the more recent past, even extensive modifications to an aircraft type have
sometimes not lead to a different series designation, e.g. a currently produced
F-16C is much different from an early production F-16C.
(6) Status Prefix: Any aircraft, which is not in
normal operational service, can receive a prefix letter in its designation to
reflect its current status. Because both modified mission and status prefix
letters can appear to the left of the basic mission symbol, both groups of
letters are distinct to avoid ambiguities. The following status prefixes are
defined:
Notes for Status
Prefix Symbol:
There are three
additional elements of a military aircraft designation, which are not part of
the MDS proper, but which are nevertheless often encountered. These elements
can be seen in the designations:
|
Examples: |
F-15E |
- |
51 |
- |
MC |
|
Eagle |
|
|
EA-6B |
- |
40 |
- |
GR |
|
Prowler |
|
|
(MDS) |
|
(8) |
|
(9) |
|
(7) |
(7) Popular Name: Many U.S. military aircraft have
an official "popular name" assigned. This official name can't be
assigned by the manufacturer and/or DOD customer at will, but has to run
through an approval process in which proposed names are checked for conflicts
with existing names (both military and commercial) and their "political
correctness". Of course, official names tend to be disregarded by the
people actually flying or maintaining the aircraft.
(8) Block Number: Block numbers are not part of the
official MDS designation, and their use is optional to the various DOD
services. In fact, block numbers are used for some production aircraft (e.g.
the F-15) but not all. Block numbers were introduced by the U.S. Army Air Force
in World War II to distinguish between minor sub-variants of a specific
aircraft variant, and were originally assigned in steps of five (1, 5, 10, 15,
...), with the gaps being intended to be used for modifications after
production. This was also the rule for block numbers as defined in the first
issue of the current designation system in 1962. The current AFI 16-401(I),
however, defines block numbers as optional and doesn't state any rules for
their actual application. In fact, there are several aircraft types where the
block numbers were assigned in strict sequence from 1 up, leaving no gaps. It
also seems that the USAF doesn't generally use the "dash-number"
nomenclature any more, e.g. the latest B-2A update is generally referred to as
"B-2A Block 30" and not "B-2A-30".
(9) Manufacturer Code
Letters: The
original designation system as defined in 1962 also mandated the use of a
two-letter code suffix to identify the manufacturing plant of an aircraft. Like
the block numbers, these code letters were introduced by the USAAF during World
War II. However, manufacturers' codes are no longer mentioned at all in the
current AFI 16-401(I). Therefore they are definitely no longer mandatory, and
even their optional use has apparently essentially ceased. While I have seen
the first F-22s referred to as "F-22A-1-LM", this may have been
artistic license by the author. For what it's worth, the list of code letters
as defined in 1962 follows:
[1] AFR 66-11, AR 700-26,
BUWEPSINST 13100.7: "Designating, Redesignating, and Naming of Military
Aircraft", 1962
[2] Department of Defense: "Model Designation of Military Aircraft,
Rockets and Missiles", 7/1964, 1/1965, 7/1965, 1/1970 editions
[3] Department of Defense Publication 4120.15-L: "Model Designation of
Military Aerospace Vehicles", 1974, 1977, 1986, 1987, 1990, 1993, 1996,
1998 and 2004
editions
[4] AFI 16-401(I), AR 70-50, NAVAIRINST 13100.16: "Designating
and Naming Military Aerospace Vehicles"
[5] Department of Defense Aircraft Nomenclature Records
Comments and corrections to: Andreas Parsch
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Last
Updated: 7 April 2005