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== Offsetting in airline lists ==
==Improvement drive==
The article on ] is currently nominated on ]. Vote for ] there.--] 09:11, 8 August 2005 (UTC)


What's the justification for this layout?
== Terminals ==


* ]
What is the feeling of the group here about the terminal lists? An anon editor slapped a cleanup tag on ] and one of the items removed afterwards was the sections on the terminal and the how they are used by the various airlines and where they airlines fly to. That seems to be a standard element of most airport articles, especially for major airports. I could not find suggested heading as a part of this project. Should there be one? Should the data on terminals be in articles? ] 17:37, 12 August 2005 (UTC)
** ] (New York LaGuardia)
* ]
** ] operated by ] (Cincinnati)
* ]
** ] operated by ] (Philadelphia)


I have yet to see an article where the "zig-zag" structure clarifies anything. At small airports, you get the effect above, where the mainline carriers are listed even though they don't fly there. At big hubs, it looks even sillier because you end up with a fat block of mainline destinations and a thinner block of regional destinations. IMO, it's just as informative to say:
A lot of articles would be nothing but stubs without those sections, and I think that the information on the terminals, airlines, and destinations is one of the most important parts of an airport article. You should restore the original McCarran Article and be on the look-out for more of those clean-ups. ] 17:49, 12 August 2005 (UTC)


* ] (New York LaGuardia)
::I did restore that section. However on the McCarren talk page there is a discussion about what should be in an airport article. Should charter service be included? What is the recommended order for the sections? Should sightseeing be included, McCarren is a major sightseeing hub, in the article? Should information about cargo be listed? I think these should be discussed in this project under a structre heading that would indicate the suggested order and what should be generally covered in each section and what should not be included in the article? I may add that if there are no objections. ] 20:45, 12 August 2005 (UTC)
* ] operated by ] (Cincinnati)
* ] operated by ] (Philadelphia)


So why do we offset the regionals? - ] 20:13, 4 January 2006 (UTC)
::: My suggestions over at the LAS talk page where to not include gate information, that airline info should be at the end (right before links) and that charter airline info, if included, should be separated out. I also generally do think that article was a bit of a mess, but that the response of deleting all kinds of stuff was silly. ] 00:06, 13 August 2005 (UTC)
:Because nobody looks for a sign that says "American Eagle" - they look for one that says "American Airlines." The entire justification for the regionals is that they are intended to be tied as closely to the mainline brand as possible. You can't buy a ticket for "US Airways Express." You can buy a ticket on US Airways. ]


== Accents in airport names ==
== Layout and formatting of ICAO + IATA codes ==


Hi, I'm new to Wikiprojects and thought I'd like to participate in the airport project. I have already created ], and I was wondering whether accents should be used in destination lists, for example, is it Zurich or Zürich? ] 20:17, 04 January 2006 (UTC)
Hello all, an issue has recently come up regarding the placement of ICAO and IATA codes in airport articles. It arose at ], and identified the fact that there is no explicit standard as to whether airport codes should be placed after the article title, in the infobox, or both. I've reproduced some comments from the Victoria airport page below, and started an informal survey &mdash please weigh in. -] | ] 17:47, 17 August 2005 (UTC)
*It all depends on what the airport's English name is. The ] are avaialble. ] 21:17, 4 January 2006 (UTC)


== Creating redirect pages ==
=== COMMENTS ===
Under the heading 'creation of a new airport' on the main project page, should the fourth dot point be changed to read: ''Create redirect articles or disambiguation pages for the ICAO and IATA Codes'' instead of ''Create redirect articles for the ICAO and IATA Codes'' as it currently reads? I thought I'd best put a note up here first before diving in and changing it. -- ] 11:25, 8 January 2006 (UTC)
:''Originally copied from ].''
*How about ''Create redirect articles or disambiguation pages as appropiate for the ICAO and IATA Codes''? ] 06:08, 9 January 2006 (UTC)
So ] just reverted my edit to add the airport codes to the opening paragraph of this article, citing the fact that they are in the infobox. His (i'm assuming) edits are not incorrect, but i want to put down why i disagree.
:: Even better! -- ]|] 06:12, 9 January 2006 (UTC)


== Articles for the Misplaced Pages 1.0 project ==
* The codes are redirects to this aiport
The codes appear in bold at the beginning of the article, which is standard wikipedia style for alternate names for things (if something has multiple names) and those bold words should redirect to the article, which they do.


Hi, I'm a member of the ], which is looking to identify quality articles in Misplaced Pages for future publication on CD or paper. We recently began assessing using ], and we are looking for A-class, B-class, and ], with no POV or copyright problems. Can you recommend any suitable articles? Please post your suggestions here. Thanks a lot! ] <sup>]</sup> 17:40, 2 February 2006 (UTC)
* This is standard accoss many airport articles
In all the airport articles that i have edited lately, i have been placing the codes just after the primary name, and before the alternate names. I am a big fan of standard layout, and i don't feel it should be altered if the codes appear in a table.


== Airports not included ==
The table seems more like "extra info cleverly formatted" but should not remove the codes from the opening paragraph.


It is my understanding that this project covers all airports since we are working to improve the quality of all articles that are airport related. I have removed that change and broght the discussion over here. The airport that one editor listed as not a part of this project was ]. I don't see how removing one airport from the project can improve quality of the encylopedia as a whole. I strongly feel if we are going to support an action like that, then we will be creating a large problem. In any case, doing something like that requires a discussion here since it is a major change to the project. It is not a minor change in my mind. It seems to be an effort to avoid the consensus process. ] 19:30, 5 February 2006 (UTC)
] doesn't seem to say much about what should be done when the info box exists, and perhaps that would be a more suitable place to discuss this. (Man, after checking my own link, the ] actually has the codes in the table and in the opening paragraph. However, this issue is still up for discussion, i think)
:Well, I guess this is really a continuation of ] above... I think this is an all or nothing affair, and the guidelines of this project would improve any/all airport articles.
:Personally I think we need to knock the ] article into shape, but i'm not sure I've got the stomach for it... T/] 19:39, 5 February 2006 (UTC)
::From reading some comments, it looks like any changes to the article to help make it more conforming are removed by a group of editors. This affects two projects since the same is true for the airline. So it looks like the options are:
::#Ignore the articles.
::#Be involved in a revert war
::#Protect the article
::#Move most of the material to a travel wiki
::#Turn it over to the cleanup crew
::If I was to choose I probably go with the protect, tag for cleanup and ask the cleanup project to do the work. While I may not agree with everything they do, in this case their help might be useful for many reasons. ] 19:56, 5 February 2006 (UTC)


::Vegas, I'm sorry if I made a major change. Thanks for pointing it out. However, as I personally experienced, efforts in trying to standardize the SIN article is countered by reversions of a few SGpedians. They have taken it to their own hands that they do not want to standardize the article, so as to conform to the Wikiprojects template. So, I thought that in order to spare future newbies (such as me) from using their energy against these people, I excluded the SIN article, and together, the SQ articles, from the corresponding projects. If you got a better idea, I'm listening. ] 21:01, 5 February 2006 (UTC)
In summary, i support restoring my codes to the opening paragraph. Please comment
:::Well there are three options listed above. If you have others to suggest we are listening. On wiki, problems and issues are suppose to be handled by gathering consensus. We also are suppose to be guided by the policies and guidelines. That's why I brought the discussion here so that we can work towards generating some consensus. Remember that there is a difference between this encylopedia wiki and the travel wiki. I suspect that much of what those editors want to include would be welcome in a travel wiki (ah, a 4th option). ] 22:11, 5 February 2006 (UTC)
::::Personally, I'd prefer to protect the article, only if I knew how. And ideally, I'd want someone to arbitrate on the decision. After all, what's wrong with standardization? ] 22:15, 5 February 2006 (UTC)
:::::I would definitely not support protecting the article, as that would be against Misplaced Pages's protection policies. Protection isn't used to enforce a side in an edit war. What I would be in favor of doing is just en masse descending upon the article and making the changes we feel are best for the article. Strength in numbers and consensus. ] 04:25, 6 February 2006 (UTC)
::::::Well at http://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=Singapore_Changi_Airport&oldid=28894679 there's a list of the destinations in the std format - should save someone a bit of work on trawling through the nasty table format it's currently in. Obviously it needs to be updated, but I think this'll be less work than reconverting the entire list! Thanks/] 10:02, 6 February 2006 (UTC)
::::Added a fifth option above, let the cleanup crew handle it. ] 19:27, 6 February 2006 (UTC)
:So, I see ] (wonder who that is) has started reverting and adding back in the codeshares... thanks/] 10:33, 6 February 2006 (UTC)
::Since Changi is not part of the project, I don't see why we need to standardise it. --]]]] (]) 10:44, 6 February 2006 (UTC)
:::I admit that my edit summary on the talk page was misleading, so I added a clarification. I did not mean that the article <i>shouldn't</i> be part of the WikiProject; the idea is that all airport articles are. I removed the project tag because the page is far from representative of the work of this project and I do not want new users thinking that the SIN article uses the standard format that other pages should follow. If we can fix the article, then the tag should be restored. ] 13:20, 6 February 2006 (UTC)
::::Perhaps we could use "Airport articles not yet standardized" to emphasize that we do intend to include it in the project, but it's not done yet. ] 19:40, 7 February 2006 (UTC)


:::I think we should decide whether we would include it in the project or not. Obviously, the SGpedians do not want to include it, since they have their own way of writing the article, which is significantly different from the guidelines of the project. If we do decide to include it, then implementation is the next task. If we edit it, it would only take a matter of hours, if not minutes, for one of the SGpedians to revert it in their own preferred style. If there are any suggestions regarding this... ] 19:52, 7 February 2006 (UTC)
-- ] 07:09:32, 2005-08-17 (UTC)


::::I have avoided commenting in these pages since I considered myself a non-participant (or rather, as I was on strike), but I think I have had enough with comments such as the one above. It sickens me knowing there are individuals who choose the easy way out, prefering to either exclude or include by force, instead of sitting down to discuss why opposing views exists. The continued labelling of "SGpedians" in such a way is what I see as galvanising otherwise nuetral editors to take this as a war against a particular group of people being portrayed negatively as partisans, rebels, or renegades. Pardon my language, but since when did wikipedia become a nursery playground?--] 20:22, 7 February 2006 (UTC)
::&nbsp;&nbsp;Fudoreaper's point about redirects is bang on, and it's the thing I dislike most about the solution of having codes only in the infobox. However, I would argue that a having redundant information right at the top of the article is a very bad thing, and that placing the codes in the opening sentance disrupts the flow of the language. I also think that anyone who gets redirected to the article by way of an ICAO/IATA code probably knows a thing or two about them and that makes it less important to identify a redirect in bold (though I know this breaches wikipedia convention).
::&nbsp;&nbsp;Apart from the issue about the formatting of redirects in the intro, I would contend that Fudoreaper's second point about standards is less important. The standard is whatever we choose it to be, and we should choose a good standard. If that means extra work changing articles now, well I say better now than later as it the work associated will only increase with time.
::&nbsp;&nbsp;If others have input I'm willing to be flexible, and I'm also open to solutions that I don't see yet. As Fudoreaper so appropriately says: Please comment. -] | ] 17:47, 17 August 2005 (UTC)
:::I'm not so sure about assuming someone getting redirected knows something about airport codes. Take the case of my local airport. Everyone in town knows its ICAO code and could type it is as the name. They simply enter KLAS and off they go to the airport, except they wanted the TV station with that call sign. Yes, that is now a redirect, the TV station was moved to a new name so a DAB page could be located put in place. The point here is that if there are more ICAO or IATA code redirects around that point to an airport, it could confuse those who get to an airport instead of the comany or whatever that they thought they would get. So explaining how they got there at the beginning of the article, as suggested above, probably would explain this to those people. ] has a similar problem. I think where they are is, the codes should be in the infobox, and nothing says that an editor can not also use the template.
:::: (i went on a 4 day camping trip immediately after i made my original comments, i'm trying to catch up, now :) My point about standardization was only that i feel that an airport article should have a consistent place for information that exists about every airport. Coords, codes, runways, etc. That info should be put in a consistent place so that i can open an airport article and in sub-seconds find the key pieces of info. -- ] 20:33:05, 2005-08-25 (UTC)


:::I do not understand you. First, you suggested to remove the relevant articles of SIN and SQ from the relevant projects (Let me remind you of your comment when you reverted the SQ destinations article February 5, 2006 8:08). Now you are sickened that there are people "prefering to either exclude or include by force". Make up your mind. I also do not use "SGpedians" as a label for "galvanising otherwise nuetral (sic) editors". I only use that term for practical reasons. Or maybe you'd like me to name all of you who always reverts edits in the relevant articles if the edits do not suit your tastes? Namely ], ], and ]? Besides, one of you actually used that in referring to you collectively back in 2005. One more thing, why should you get the impression that this term treats you as rebels or renegades, when all three of you are not listed as participants (at least as of this hour) in the first place? ] 00:53, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
:::One addtiional point. Several airport artciles mention the IATA code since it is import for the article in some way. Whatever decision is made, those types of uses of the code should be allowed in the article. ] 19:13, 17 August 2005 (UTC)
::::Of course. In every code-related edit i have made, i have conciously not changed any article text that talks about the name in any more detail than "The IATA code is BLAH". If it talks about the history of the name, or how the name was chosen, then this text should be unaltered, as removing it would diminish the article. However, if there is a sentence that says, "The IATA code is BLAH.", i think that can be removed and replaced with that info in a template and/or infobox. -- ] 20:38:22, 2005-08-25 (UTC)


::::I do not quite understand you or your antics either. Firstly, may it go down in the records, that the idea of excluding articles from wikiproject have never crossed my mind as even a ''possibility'', until I noticed Dbinder removing the wikproject tag from both the Singapore Changi Airport and Singapore Airlines articles. Interesting, for it makes me wonder if this action is sending a message of "you wont follow my lead? Then I shall disown you". And to further enforce this message, you added a section known as "Airports that are not part of the project", an amusing step leaving me to wonder if that reflects your self-censorship from the articles in question, or simply a refusal to discuss and negotiate.
Given the voting to this point, it looks like most people support codes in the infobox and after the article title. Would anyone object to calling this issue closed and making that format standard? -] | ] 05:06, 23 August 2005 (UTC)


::::So fine. If that is the kind of immature stand some of you are going to take, then please, be my guest. Feel free to extend the same condition on all articles you have a problem with, and that includes the one on SIA destinations, hence my statement "Then exclude this article from the wikiproject as has been done for Singapore Changi Airport", if you want to use this wikiproject as a basis for revert warring, a behavior which is far more damaging to wikipedia on the whole. So a mere suggestion on my part based on the behavior of yourself and Dbinder is reflective of me wanting out? Of my wanting to label ourselves as renegades? Hardly. You excluded us '''before''' I even "asked" for it, so in what way is my comment contradictory?
:Based on the ] below that would seem to be the case. If so, should it be added to the project page someplace? Looks like the vote was open for about a week, enough time for a good straw poll. ] 06:48, 23 August 2005 (UTC)


::::As for the term SGpedians, it was, for your information, a term we coined to refer to ourselves. Nothing inflammatory about it at all as a label for Sg-related individuals. Instead, I take obvious issue with your sweeping statement claiming "the SGpedians do not want to include it". For your information, the people who have ever opposed any of these so-called "standardisation" efforts dont just come from the SGpedian community alone, and neither are all SGpedians sharing like-minded opinions. If you have to list the three individuals, then yes that is precisely what you '''should''' be doing, without insulting an entire community with such degrading comments. Practical reasons my foot. Your utilisation of the label reflects strongly on your believe that certain individuals from a certain locality are ganging up to promote POV in an article related to that locality, and it clearly shows in the way you attempt to "remove" this POV.
::I would very much like if the result of this discussion was a consensus that caused something to be written down in a "official" place (such as ]) for future reference for any wikipedia editor. And also reference in case of disagreement. (Like citing the wikipedia manual of style) I'm not personally familiar enough with WikiProjects Airports to say exactly where this should be written--i'm kinda green with airport knowledge--but it should be written, i think. -- ] 20:48:20, 2005-08-25 (UTC)


::::Last but not least, do share your thoughts on how non-participants in this wikiproject cannot be labelled as "rebels or renegades"? I would certainly like to get some insights into how your grey matter works before commenting.--] 07:35, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
=== SURVEY ===
Please note that this survey is fairly informal. Please check back often to see if comments have been made that might change your mind.
:'''I support placing airport codes only after the article title:'''
:#vote here


:Guys, can we just edit up a version of the SIN article as we'd want it at a sub-page then then turn it over to other parties (cleanup crew, RfC, whatever)? ] 08:51, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
:'''I support placing airport codes only in the infobox:'''
::I dont quite get you. You are encouraging article-] in place of discussions?--] 08:56, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
:#] | ] 17:47, 17 August 2005 (UTC)
:::Who's forking an article? An article on a sub (talk) page is a good way to get a complete revision in place for discussion and comparison, without constant reverts. Very little of the discussion above is about the task at hand... Thanks/] 09:27, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
::::As it stands, the existing article is not reflective of anyone's ideals, so what kind of comparison are you refering to? And if that is not forking an article, what is?--] 09:33, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
:::::It's not forking because it's not a real article in the encyclopedia namespace and it will have no inward links from other articles. All it is is a tool to aid discussion. If the current article does not meet your ideals then point to a past revision that does, or feel free to demonstrate how you feel it should be (on another sub page). T/] 09:43, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
::::::There has been numerous debates over the virtues of creating "unreal articles", for many a times, they have been used to validate a version over another, no different for forking an article, obviously. The article does not, and have never been a demonstration of my full intentions. And to ask me to utilise the same article-forking method I just criticised to justify my version is some kind of a mockery to me.--] 10:09, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
:::::::I am trying to work with you here, I'm trying to be constructive, and I'm trying to focus on the problem rather than expanding it and argumenting for arguments sake. One of the intended uses of sub-pages is for ]. ] 10:40, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
::::::::Considering unending debates over the utilisation of sub-pages, which is clearly evident even in the guideline article you quote above, I would personally prefer a more productive means of hammering out a deal which all are amicable to. Unless you are telling me you have a wealth of information now which you are clamouring to add, instead of this merely being a formatting/presentation dispute, then would not a reference to any article here which "conforms" to your existing "standards" to demonstrate your intentions be just as effective?--] 12:08, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
:::::::::<<bashes head against wall>> /] 12:55, 8 February 2006 (UTC)


::::Huaiwei, if you don't want the articles to be standardized, per the Wikiproject guidelines, then why are you making such a big fuzz about whether the articles should be included or not? If you want to include it, then subject it to standardization. If you don't want it to subject to standardization, then don't include it. Simple as that. It is simple modus tollens, Huaiwei. And regarding your suggestion to exclude the articles, isn't that what the English sentence conveys as its meaning? If you have other meanings in mind, make it clear. As far as the sentence is concerned, you wanted the articles out of the project.
:'''I support placing airport codes both in the infobox and after the article title:'''
::::And regarding my use of the term "SGpedians", I do not use it to make a sweeping statement, as you claim. Notice that in two out of three occasions, I qualify my statements, such as "a few SGpedians" and "one of the SGpedians". This translates as "There is a set of SGpedians, and within that set, there is an entity or entities" to which I am referring of. Notice I never used a universal quantifier. Semantics, Huaiwei, semantics.
:#] 00:56, 18 August 2005 (UTC)
:#]'']'' 02:30, 18 August 2005 (UTC)
:#<span style="font-size:10pt; FONT-VARIANT: small-caps;">] <strong>&middot; <small>]</small></strong></span> 15:00, 18 August 2005 (UTC)
:#] 05:11, August 23, 2005 (UTC)
:#] 06:41, 23 August 2005 (UTC)
:#] 20:29:39, 2005-08-25 (UTC)
:#] 20:36, 25 August 2005 (UTC)
:#] 01:11, 17 September 2005 (UTC)


::::Regarding rebels and renegades, it is just the same as military deserters. You cannot be a deserter unless you are part of the unit. ] 11:35, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
=== Triffling Things ===


:::::You appear to be tripping over yourselves in trying to force me into pre-conceived moulds of who you think I am and what I want here. Yes, I "don't want the articles to be standardized", based on '''some of''' the '''existing''' Wikiproject guidelines. So the obvious solution is to discuss the relevant guidelines, and not to start removing articles the way you have done. Your modus operandi appears to be highly flawed, and setting an unhealthy precedent in wikipedia's efforts to promote community-based efforts. Your "you are with me, or you are not with me" mentality may be "simple" in your books, but are woefully simplistic, immature and inappriopriate in mine.
I'm curious how people feel about the following standardization issues for desitnation lists:
# Do we prefer Seattle or Seattle/Tacoma? (I don't care)
# For BWI, is it Baltimore or Baltimore/Washinton? (I prefer the former since it's a shorter name, the airport is much closer to Baltimore, and there are two other washington airports)
# If we distinguish between two airports in the same city by name, do we slash or hyphenate? For example, is it Chicago/Midway or Chicago-Midway, or something else? (I don't care)
# Is it Washington-Reagan or Washington-National? (I don't care)
# Is it Houston-Bush or Houston-Intercontinental? (I don't care)
# Is it New York-JFK or New York-Kennedy? (I prefer JFK, but don't care strongly)
# Also, for cases where there is more than one city with the same name, both having commercial airports, (like Portland), I've been trying to specific which state with the two letter abbreviation in parenthesis. Any objections?
Feel free to add to this list. ] 00:16, 18 August 2005 (UTC)


:::::So by your books, you took my sentence in one article to mean I "'''wanted''' the article'''s''' out of the project". At the same time, you expect others to understand "semantics", to take context into consideration, and to qualify your statements for you. Hypocrisy knows no bounds I suppose? ;)
My thoughts... I could be wrong....
# I've seen (and done) both. I guess I would choose Seattle/Tacoma if we are going to pick a standard.
# Baltimore/Washington has become pretty standard and that's what I use. That's it's name, and it is the 3rd airport for Washington, DC.
# I've seen both but the slash is more common; I myself always use slashes.
# Washington/Reagan is more often used for wiki airports and I use it as well. I would prefer though, Washington/National if it became standard.
# Houston/Intercontinental is more often used for wiki airports and I use it as well (and would vote for this alternative).
# I've seen both, not sure which is more common, and would also prefer, and use, New York/JFK
# It's wiki airport standard to put the state in parenthesis if there's more than one in that city.


:::::And the "unit" we talk about here is the wikipedian community, not this wikiproject. Aviation-related articles are not in the sole domain of this project's participants, and are not subject solely to their contributions. Every single wikipedian is fully entitled to edit them, to agree or disagree with project guidlines, and to comment, suggest and debate on them. Shocking, indeed, that for one lambasting others for "taking ownership" of articles, he appears to be just as gulty of demonstrating the exact same fault?--] 11:58, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
I agree these are triffling; and I too don't care ''that'' much one way or the other, but they should be standardized. ] 02:38, 18 August 2005 (UTC)


::::Funny, if my mentality is "woefully simplistic, immature and inappriopriate", then how come you spend time answering it? I was getting the impression that you don't deal with "nursery playground" people?
*The airlines project has been considering a master list of all airports listed and arranged like they are in many of the larger airline destination articles. This would make it easier to create destination lists for each airline with the same information for all airlines. Maybe this project could use what comes out of that effort. The biggest problem is that they use the airport name but this project uses a city ''name''. ] 05:34, 18 August 2005 (UTC)
::::Oh well, I tried to be logical, but obviously, it still doesn't work. I won't deal with illogical people from now on. ] 12:12, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
** I'm not sure exactly what you mean by the airport name. The whole name would be way too long to include in destination lists; I've seen people delete destination lists because they looked too long and messy already. For a big airport, you could have several airlines which each list a few dozen airports in parenthesis. And if you're just using short names, I think city names are generally far more useful. I mean sure, most people probably know O'Hare or JFK. But I think 'San Jose (CA)' or 'Providence' is more useful than 'Mineta' or 'T. F. Green'. Plus for a lot of airports, there is no way to give the name without the location anyway. ] 18:01, 18 August 2005 (UTC)
***Probably did not make this as clear as I should have, and this may not help. That list would also include the city name which would be the city name used in this project. Sometimes there is conflict in the city name where the airport is actually located. As an example, '''POU''' is ], it is listed as a destination under ] and is located in the ]. What city is used here? I'm suggesting using whatever comes out in an airlines master list of destinations. ] 21:01, 18 August 2005 (UTC)
**** Are you refering to articles in ]? Because, as I said, those are way to long. I understand your objections. However what I want is a list of short forms for use in Destination lists. I don't see a good way to fit that into the airline destination structure. I think it might be best just to make a list for our use as a subpage of Projct Airports, and specify the full airport name on that list as well. ] 23:37, 18 August 2005 (UTC)
*****Not a problem with two lists. I just think that both projects need to use the same information in articles. Using the earlier comment, one project should not use JFK and the other Kennedy. Both projects should use the same names. ] 23:53, 18 August 2005 (UTC)


:::::Answering what? ;) If you think I dont deal with "nursery playground" people, you gotta be quite mistaken. As you probably know, it is often greatly critical for parents or teachers to keep a watchful eye over their charges as they roll around in the playground, before disaster strikes.
Comments on the questions
*For different airports in the same city I would go with the dash (city-aiport)
*If it's two cities on the name use a slash (city/city)
*For names, I'd use the traditional one. That way you don't need to change it when someone adds a modified name like they did on EWR and IAH. If you select a short hand like Bush or Intercontinental maybe there needs to be a subpage here that lists these so it is clear what to use since it is difficult to cast a rule in concrete. Based on my traditional comment it would be Houston-Intercontinental. Also the IATA code is based on the Intercontinental name so more support for that as the choice.
*In some cases usage is the key, JFK is JFK for many but Kennedy has a strong showing in the NY area. I suspect that worldwide JFK would be the hands down winner.<br>] 05:34, 18 August 2005 (UTC)


:::::I suppose logic hurts, especially when it turns out that you arent much better than the folks you are choosing to nit-pick on.--] 12:23, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
== FBOs ==


Well, if anyone is going to clean this article up, now would be a good time. ] has just been ]. ] 16:54, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
Should data for ]s be included in airport articles? What data specifically should be included? How do we prevent the article from sounding advertisement-like while still being informative if we chose to include FBOs? -] | ] 02:35, 22 August 2005 (UTC)<br>
P.S. See also the discussion at ]


==PCN==
: I think they probably should not be included. It seems like a level of detail that isn't necessary—no one who needs to know that level of detail will be using Misplaced Pages to find it out, they will be going to more detailed resources (Jeppesen, AOPA). It reminds me of the arguments I just made to delete ]. (The VFD is at ].) We don't want to become the Yellow Pages.
I miss ] - could somebody please initiate this article? ] 19:31, 7 February 2006 (UTC)
:Done. Now you have to create ]. Cheers. ] ] 21:56, 7 February 2006 (UTC)


==]==
: For that matter, I'm not particularly crazy about the airport articles listing all of the airlines that serve the airport, but it looks like that's a little ingrained already for me to start complaining now. Again, too Yellow-Pages like, especially the articles that list gate numbers and whatnot. No one who needs that information is going to an encyclopedia to get it. IMHO. —] 02:42, August 22, 2005 (UTC)
I need some suggestions as to what to do with this airport. As of the new CFS (Feb 16) the airport is listed as abandoned, so do I
::I think someone is removing the gate numbers from the articles. So that concern may be on its way to being resolved. ] 02:47, 22 August 2005 (UTC)
#Delete the stub and the ICAO code link.
:::I've been doing some of that. Don't know if I am who you're referring to. ] 05:17, 22 August 2005 (UTC)
#Turn it into something like ] and create a new category ].
::This isn't a justification for why it should be in an encylcopedia, but info regarding which airlines fly where to where does not exist in an organized way that I have managed to find online. ] 05:17, 22 August 2005 (UTC)
#Some other idea
: FBOs are often owned by larger companies so if you include them in airport articles, it establishes a link between the company article and airports where that company has operations. In some airports, the FBOs operate terminals so that would seem reasonable to mention. You can avoid the information sounding like an advertisement by keeping the entry short. I think avoiding listing all of the services that an FBO provides would be the correct way to go if FBOs are added. ] 02:57, 22 August 2005 (UTC)


Right now I am leaning towards 2 but I'm open to ideas. ] ] 06:09, 11 February 2006 (UTC)
:: Often but not always, many operate under a non-profit charter--] 05:21, 22 August 2005 (UTC)
*I think 2 is the only choice. Basically if an airport closes, new material would not be added. It stays as a document of the no longer active airport. More information can be added if someone finds some, but other then that, few updates would be expected. ] 06:27, 11 February 2006 (UTC)


== ] ==
:::For me, one reason I feel FBOs should be included is that they reflect a side not often seen by the general public and I think a lot of people are actually interested in reading about what goes on behind the scenes at an airport (I'm certainly more interested in the stuff I don't know about than the stuff I can go down to the airport and find out about myself). I also think its cool to establish a company link, but if we remove the list of services then I'm lost on what info we could usefully include. Finally, Some FBOs operate their own "mini-terminals" at large airports. For example, at vancouver international Chevron, Shell, and Esso each operate a "terminal" that handles passengers, boarding, and baggage and is totally separate from the main and south terminals. So how do you get around this? -] | ] 01:17, 23 August 2005 (UTC)


This category just appeared. Any opinions on it? ] 08:43, 26 February 2006 (UTC)
::::I think that simply a mention that general aviation FBOs are at the airport would be enough to inform the general public—anyone who needs more detail than that are going to go to non-encyclopedia sources to get it. Unless there's something particularly notable about an FBO on its own, I don't think just the fact that it exists is noteworthy... —] 01:35, August 23, 2005 (UTC)
:it seems a little odd I would have thought ] would have been a better idea. ] ] 14:45, 26 February 2006 (UTC)
:I'd go with the list. ] 16:09, 26 February 2006 (UTC)


== Why not Wikilink the destinations? ==
I would really appreciate anyone with ideas making some edits at ] by the way. It's nice to get a third party in the action when two editors are in opposition. -] | ] 01:17, 23 August 2005 (UTC)
:Actually the discussion here may be the proper way to deal with that article. If the project can reach a consensus then you can use the project position to resolve the difference of opinion in the article. If I look at the comments so far, I see some limited support to allow the FBOs some minimal information in articles. But there is some opposition. I suggest waiting a few days and then summing up this discussion and see if it supports including FBOs and if so with what limits. ] 02:37, 23 August 2005 (UTC)
::Oh I fully appreciate that, it was with that goal in mind that I brought it up here. However in this case neither editor is really extreme or out of line (mind you, I'm including myself in that so take it with a grain of salt), and actual edits to the page have a way of bringing out fresh ideas... -] | ] 04:56, 23 August 2005 (UTC)


This policy seems a little odd to me - it's usual Misplaced Pages policy to Wikilink any mention of a city in other articles, and the destinations served by an airport are not necessarily mentioned elsewhere in the article. What's the rationale behind not Wikilinking them? &mdash; ] 10:00, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
== Redirects for IATA/ICAO codes? ==
:I agree with the policy as is. The number of links would be excessive and clutter up the page. Also, it would make editing more cumbersome, since every single link would have to be in the form <nowiki>]</nowiki>. ] 16:03, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
::Not only that, but looking at airport articles that do wikilink, it becomes confusing at times, especially where there are two airlines that have many destinations listed right next to each other. You can't tell where one begins and the other ends. -- ] / ] / ] 05:09, 2 April 2006 (UTC)


== Non-Airport Disambiguation ==
Greetings -- I'm not new to Misplaced Pages, but I am new to WikiProjects, and since I'm an airport and aviation enthusiast I thought I'd start here first. (Is there a protocol for joining a project? In typical WP fashion I just added myself to the list of participants and have starting figuring out what to get to work on, but if there's more formality than that, please excuse me for barging in.)


KABQ is also an Albuquerque radio station call sign. I don't know how to set up a disambiguation page.
Anyway, I didn't see it mentioned but do we have a policy/consensus on creating redirects (or adding to disambig pages) for airport codes? I've worked on a few airport articles and if the code is not a redirect I've added them, and I've seen others already existing, so I guess they're generally accepted, but is it (or should it be) a project goal to add them where they don't exist? ] 01:25, 17 September 2005 (UTC)
:Select the name on the redirected from line. Then edit the redirect article to a dab. I did this for KABQ. Note that the radio station article needs to be disambiguated as ]. ] 23:53, 7 March 2006 (UTC)


== Aruba or Oranjestad? ==
: Hi MCB. I haven't added myself to this wikiproject yet because I've been spending most of my time on the ] wikiproject but I have created and worked on a few airport articles so I have added it to my watchlist. In response to your first questions, my experience has been that if you add yourself to a project, people are usually happy to have you along and help out.
:In response to your second question, out of consideration for articles that share three letter acronyms with airport codes, it is a good idea to create a disambiguation page rather than create a redirect. Even if other articles for ] don't exist yet, that's not to say that the ''Big Hungry Xylophonists'' won't be created in future. Where there are links to BHX, the correct way to deal with them would be to link them to Birmingham International. So the link would look like 'Birmingham International Airport|BHX' - all in square brackets ] Have Fun. ] 05:02, 17 September 2005 (UTC)


Hello all. What seems to be the consensus on this? I tried to search around but found nothing. Personally, I prefer Aruba over Oranjestad, Mauritius over Mahebourg, basically, island over city-within-island, simply because the island is more identifiable than the city. Any thoughts on this? ] 00:38, 24 March 2006 (UTC)
== List of the world's busiest airports by international passenger traffic ==


Why don't do we do Oranjestad (Aruba). Actually, I don't really see the point to putting the destinations within brackets, other than making it look neater. -- ] / ] / ] 01:21, 24 March 2006 (UTC)
Any comments on the ] article? I'm tempted to put this up for AfD since I'm not sure it is needed. Most of the links are to cities and not airports. Any interest in saving this article and cleaning it up and making sure the data is current? ] 02:14, 22 September 2005 (UTC)


== Newcastle airport coordinates wrong ==
Also consider ] and ]. ] 02:16, 22 September 2005 (UTC)


While , I noticed that the coordinates of ] are very far off. I don't know the correct ones, so I haven't fixed it. ] 01:14, 2 April 2006 (UTC)
:I'd vfd them all. Don't worry about it too much, if deleting them isn't appropriate after all, then that will come out at vfd. -] | ] 21:44, 22 September 2005 (UTC)
:Hmmm. I didn't use the .kmz file from the web site you linked, but I'm looking at the article in one window and Google Earth in another, and the coordinates appear correct to me. ] 04:15, 2 April 2006 (UTC)
::Click on the coordinate link in the article, then on "mapquest". You'll get a beautiful red star in the middle of the North Sea. ] 00:19, 3 April 2006 (UTC)
:::That's because the coordinates said East when it should be West. Try it now. ] ] 03:49, 3 April 2006 (UTC)
::::Yup, works beautifully. Thanks! ] 05:04, 3 April 2006 (UTC)
:::::Ooops! I very carefully checked the digits in each field against each other, but must have missed the E/W part! Sorry about that. ] 05:34, 4 April 2006 (UTC)


== Disambiguation of cities with multiple airports ==
:One of the pages is an old discussion. See ].--] 09:36, 24 September 2005 (UTC)


This wasn't fully resolved the last time it was brought up... so
== City disambiguation ==
what is the actual policy? The airport page says that (London-Heathrow) or (London Heathrow) with or without dashes is fine, yet pages have been reverted for changing it. Not to mention, it is different from article to article as it stands.


The slash marks should be eliminated as an option because they are used with an airport serving two cities (ala Seattle/Tacoma). Dashes are also used in conjunction with city-city pairings, and they just look ugly in general. There shouldn't be any problem with using the city and the airport name after (like how it would be spoken); but, using the IATA code looks the cleanest. It also takes up less space and makes the list more streamlined. And, it is the most practical for use in conjunction with travel websites, etc. (Usually a person only puts in the IATA code or city name, not the name of the airport...)
I don't like the way that multiple cities with the same name are disambiguated. The parenthesis within parenthesis and non-standard abbreviations are jarring, and in some cases not entirely clear. I favor using ]-style abbreviations where necessary, and spelling out the full name where abbreviations would be unwieldly. ABC Airlines (San Jose, Calif., San Jose, Costa Rica). XYZ Airways (Portland, Ore., Portland, Maine). Alternatively, they could be displayed the way the airlines do it on the terminal displays... that would require separating destinations with semicolons - as in (San Jose, CA; San Jose, Costa Rica; Manchester, UK; Manchester, NH; Portland, OR; Portland, ME). Either way, it would get rid of the parenthesis within the parenthesis. ] 04:02, 27 September 2005 (UTC)


So, what does everyone else think (and maybe something concrete can be decided)?
*Firstly, I think that comma delimitting them is confusing because the destination list is already comma delimitted. There might be a way to do this that's better than parentheses, but commas seem to confuse the issue.It might be obvious for some, but If I saw "London, Ontario" it's not clear that that isn't the London in the UK, and Ontario airport in southern california.
* Just saw your update abouit semicolons. I think semicolons are far uglier than nested parentheses. Especially with so many of them packed together.
* Secondly, I don't see why AL is less clearly Alabama than Ala., or OR is less clear than Ore. In all the cases I know of where this comes up, it is fairly clearly from two letters which is which. All of the ones that exist to my knowledge are (feel free to add to this):
** Portland: Oregon (OR) and Maine (ME)
** St. Petersburg: Florida (FL) and Russia (RU)
** Fayetteville: Arkansas (AR) and North Carolina (NC)
** Charleston: West Virginia (WV) and North Carolina (NC)
** London: Ontario (ON) and the ones in the UK, all delimitted with a /airport name
** Rochester: New York (NY) and Minesota (MN)
** Manchester: New Hampshire (NH) and United Kingdon (UK)
** Birmingham: Alabama (AL) and United Kingdon (UK)
** San Jose: California (CA) and Costa Rica (CR)
** Santiago: Dominican Republic (DR) and Chile, usually just as far as I've seen just (Chile)
** Victoria: British Columbia (BC) and Texas (TX)
** I believe there's Springfield Missouri (MO) and another Springfield with a commercial airport, but I can't remember which.
* Thirdly, people have complained that the destination lists are already too long. Having long abbreviations makes this even worse. People have suggested leaving longer version when it would be a huge hassle to update, but I don't see the point of longer version when the old one is shorter.
* People aren't going to recognize many of the cities on Destination lists anyways. Do you know where Thief River Falls is?
* I don't really care about the capitalization bit, although in some cases in seems to make it clearer that it's an abbreviation. E.g. San Jose (CR), then CR is Costa Rica.
] 04:30, 27 September 2005 (UTC)


Which is best?
*If we were just discussing the US, I would have no problem with using the two letter postal service state code like OR or CA. Does this cause any problems for locations outside of the US? Is there a simlar code available for other countries? ] 04:50, 27 September 2005 (UTC)


(Buenos Aires EZE, London LHR, New York JFK, Paris ORY)
== US Air/ America West terminal listings ==


(Buenos Aires Ezeiza, London Heathrow, New York JFK, Paris Orly)
At least one editor has already combined these into one, listing both sets of destinations. I'm going to revert that change until there is some concesus on what to do. The problem I see with doing this is that both airlines will continue operating for at least 2 more years. Until the merger of the airlines themselves is complete, America West probably should be listed as US Airways dba America West Airlines. Comments? ] 05:04, 27 September 2005 (UTC)
*I was listing the former AWA destinations *only* as "]/]" and leaving the US Airways destinations as just ] but I think you have the more elegant solution. Make it so. ] 05:46, 27 September 2005 (UTC)
If they're in separate terminals, we should keep them separate until they come together. Once this occurs, we should list them as ] dba ] until the name America West becomes obsolete. ] 05:49, 27 September 2005 (UTC)
**There's lots of airlines that are in multiple terminals. We don't not list ] under ] just because they might be in two separate terminals. Some of the merging won't happen for several weeks or months (it will be spread out due to gate leases) but as of tomorrow it's, as you said, ] dba ]. ] 05:53, 27 September 2005 (UTC)
***I know that at Newark, they have had adjacent gates for some months. US Air moved their gates and ticket positions at McCarran last week and that was held up because of leases from what I heard, so they are working to make this happen. ] 06:11, 27 September 2005 (UTC)
***Forgot to add, can someone look at ] and see if I listed the Mesa dba entry correctly? ] 06:13, 27 September 2005 (UTC)
*Do we have consensus on what to list it under? I've been told that the correct way to post it is ] dba ] - because the operating certificate says AWA but the marketing name, etc. is now ]. Someone reverted my changes and made it "] dba ]. Can we get some sort of agreement and unification on this? ] 18:57, 5 October 2005 (UTC)
**Listing as ''US Airways operated by America West Airlines'' is not really correct. HP still is an airline that operates on its own. Its ownership has changed. Probably the most correct listing is ''America West Airlines operated by America West Airlines a division of US Airways Group'', but simply using ''America West Airlines'' is probably the cleanest and most accurate. this may be the one case that listing as ''US Airways dba America West Airlines'' may also be a better choice. Remember that HP will exist into 2007 before the FAA gets around to approving all of the changes needed to kill the airline. ] 03:55, 16 December 2005 (UTC)
***All the America West aircraft now carry heritage stickers with the US Airways merger logo and the subscript: "This aircraft operated by America West Airlines." Semi-technically it might not be correct just yet, but the airline has set a date in the first week of January that all America West branding will go away. All US and HP flights will, after that date, be marketed as US Airways - the in-flight announcements, tickets, videos, safety cards, etc. will be switched over to US Airways. HP might technically still exist until 2007, but the America West brand name will disappear into history in a matter of weeks. So, America West will be like a regional carrier - operating flights exclusively under someone else's brand name. Also, it was determined in a discussion on this page that "dba" is an inappropriate Americanism and that "operated by" is the preferred nomenclature. ] 19:48, 17 December 2005 (UTC)


(Buenos Aires-Ezeiza, London-Heathrow, New York-JFK, Paris-Orly)
== Americanisms and other recent changes ==


(Buenos Aires/Ezeiza, London/Heathrow, New York/JFK, Paris/Orly)
A couple of changes recently that have sort of irked me somewhat:


: I think I agree that a space is best. However, I'm not sure whether codes or names would be better. On the one hand, I think I would like to see "Paris Orly" and "Paris CDG". "Paris ORY" seems a little strange to me (especially to save one letter), but "Paris Charles de Gaulle" is too long for my tastes. If I had to pick though, I guess I'd take codes over long names. ] 18:43, 14 April 2006 (UTC)
# ''dba'' is in my eyes an alien term, I had to look it up to find out what it meant. I had to add the disambig mention to the ] page! I'd venture a lot of other people are likewise confused. It's American terminology where others would use franchise I guess. Consider these two options of presenting the same info:
:: I prefer the space and the actual name (i.e., the second alternative above, London Heathrow, etc.). Codes are fine for us airline/airport people who have them all memorized :-), but the vast number of readers of Misplaced Pages do not. Nevertheless, there should be exceptions to this rule: "New York JFK" is much better than "New York John F. Kennedy". Dunno which side CDG falls on. But I strongly believe both the hyphen and the slash are a bad idea. ] 19:12, 14 April 2006 (UTC)
#: ] (]) (], ], ], ] ], ], ])
:::I'd go with the hyphen, except in the case where the airport's actual name includes the city name (e.g. London Heathrow). So it should be Chicago-O'Hare, New York-JFK, London Heathrow, etc. This will also serve to clarify in the article if the city name is part of the airport name. ] 20:06, 14 April 2006 (UTC)
#: ] dba ] (Inverness, Kirkwall, Lerwick, Shetland, Sumburgh, Stornoway, Wick)
#: <small>''(nb - I'm just using ]'s changes - "Sumburgh, Stornoway" is his error in the edit)''</small>
# London/Heathrow, London/Gatwick, London/City etc rather than using the correct names of the airports (London Heathrow, London Gatwick, London City) nothing at all is gained by this and it is using terminology which is not in common use.
# Over zealous disambiguation of city names... A case in point being ] which ] has just took at hatchet to on the destination list (example of all 3 points raised). All the cities had wikilinks to the correct (disambiguated) city and where required the airport, this has been replaced by a list with no wikilinks on the city names and largely redundant 'disambiguation' of the cityname. I mean, as if there are ever going to be services to Manchester and Birmingham in the US! I'm minded to revert this change given it also added the dba usage...


::I would pick the third option, even in the case of LHR and LGW. I think the first component should be the city name, and the second component would be the distinguishing element for the airport, regardless if the official name includes the city name or not. I'd rather base it on common usage, which implies that I prefer (New York-JFK) and (Paris-Charles de Gaulle) over (New York-John F Kennedy) and (Paris-CDG) simply because people refer to these airports as "JFK" and "Charles de Gaulle" more than the other option. I believe the same goes for LHR, people refer to it as "Heathrow" than "London Heathrow". But then, that's just my 0.02 USD. ] 20:54, 14 April 2006 (UTC)
Regards/] 19:43, 5 October 2005 (UTC)
::I strongly prefer the hyphen, as a mere space does not adequately help readers determine where the city name ends and the airport name begins. Is it York Kennedy Airport in New City? Something is needed to visually differentiate the two different name structures being used within the same clause. ] 12:55, 21 April 2006 (UTC)


:::While no one refers to New York's airport as John F. Kennedy, I've heard equal numbers say "JFK" as "Kennedy". The two terms are interchangeable, so JFK is not the "standard". Either should be acceptable. ] 16:45, 21 April 2006 (UTC)
*I'm pretty sure there's places that have service to both Manchester, UK and Manchester, NH. At least ] at Philadelphia <grin>. I'm in favor of always listing the correct city names, which are always disambiguated (in my experience) on airline flight information display systems in the US. For consistency's sake... Same with the "London/Heathrow" usage. Is it differently displayed in the UK? ] 20:56, 5 October 2005 (UTC)
::::We ought to settle on one or the other. Everything else on every other article is JFK. If we want to switch everything to Kennedy, that's cool, I have no objection to it - but it looks ugly to have things one way on some articles and a different way on others. This is about standardization, after all. ] 17:48, 21 April 2006 (UTC)


:::Airports are not being spelled out in all cases. While LaGuardia is being spelled out, Kennedy is not (JFK being used). Similar airports are being spelled out. We use O'Hare, Midway; Love; Hobby, Intercontinental; Dulles, National/Reagan; Heathrow, Gatwick; Orly, Charles de Gaulle; Narita, Haneda; etc. From an editorial perspective, codes should never be used, especially since they are meaningless when composed in sentence form. This is also preferred style according to the two major manuals of style used by editors, Chicago Manual of Style and Gregg Reference Manual. Codes should only be used with space constraints, such as in tables.
*I agree with Wangi that the ''dba'' stuff is mostly unnecessary, when used regarding corporate status during a merger. 99% of Wikkipedia users are not going to care about ''USAirways dba America West Airlines'' or the former ''AMR, Inc., dba TWA'', and so forth. We airline/airport insiders tend to make more of that than needs to be done. The traveling public is concerned, from an airports point of view, with what sign is on the ticket counter and what name is painted on the airplane. (The exceptions to this are regional affiliates, where things like ''SkyWest Airlines dba United Express'' is somewhat useful, especially in aiports where there are multiple (e.g.) United Express affiliates.) ] 21:00, 5 October 2005 (UTC)
::::I think you make a fine argument, and it's my opinion that we should standardize on Kennedy. Any objections? ] 17:48, 21 April 2006 (UTC)
**The ] dba ] stuff is important precisely because at this point the airlines are merged corporately but not operationally. US/AWA flights, in many cases, operate out of separate terminals, with separate aircraft. ] 21:22, 5 October 2005 (UTC)
:::::I think it should be New York-JFK and not Kennedy because more people say and use "JFK instead of "Kennedy". ] 02:31, 22 June 2006 (UTC)
***What I'm saying is that ''since'' they're not operationally merged, there does not need to be a precise elaboration of the full corporate name or who exactly holds the FAA certificate, or whatever. It should just remain the way it was before the merger, in most cases, e.g., "] operates out of Terminal 1. ] operates out of Terminal 2." When they are merged at that airport, the article can mention that, or some intermediate state. ] 21:41, 5 October 2005 (UTC)
****I don't think it's "elaborate" to simply indicate that ] is now part of US Airways Group operating US Airways flights, as we indicate that ] operates the US Airways Express flights. Ticket check-in counters now all say "US Airways/America West Airlines." ] 21:52, 5 October 2005 (UTC)
*****If the ticket counters are merged, then for now listings should probably say (e.g.), "]/] uses Terminal 2". When the name ] goes away, that can be fixed. This way there's no need for all the "dba" stuff. ] 01:38, 7 October 2005 (UTC)
*****The correct place to list that AWA and US Airways are part of the same company is not on every airport page. If someone who is looking in the airport article for that information they are looking in the worng place. However there is a link to the airline which should explain who owns them. These entries should be logical and easy to read and not be confusing. I'd like to see the listing simply be who the ticket is sold for in the listing. So if you purchased a ticket on foo airlines, then any express flights on foo express would be included in the foo airlines listing since that is what matters on the airport page. If we wish to list the foo express destinations that can be done in that article or on the destinations page for that company. Doing this would also reduce the size of some of these entries since in many cases, both mainline and expres flights operate to some destinations. ] 18:05, 7 October 2005 (UTC)
**For an interesting one look at ]. ] 18:57, 6 October 2005 (UTC)
***The difference I see is that "Mesa Airlines dba United Express" is useful because multiple regional carriers do business as United Express, sometimes in the same airport (e.g.), DEN. Whereas in the merger case, there's only one, and no ambiguity. ] 01:38, 7 October 2005 (UTC)
****But does it matter to the person looking at information on that airport? Why maintain this level of information in two places? ] 18:05, 7 October 2005 (UTC)
*FCYTravis - yeah where an airport does serve two identically named cities then extra disambiguation is useful, however in 99% of cases just the name wikilinked to the correct city if enough. In the UK you commonly see just Heathrow, Gatwick, Stansted, Luton and London City; in Europe London Heathrow, London Gatwick, London Stansted, London Luton, London City. ] 21:26, 5 October 2005 (UTC)
*I guess the question is, what is accurate concerning the name of the company providing the service. Does the person flying xxxxx express care if it is operated by airline 1 or airline 2? Probably not even if both use one airport. The ownership issues are about the airline and should be covered in that article. If someone needs that information they can follow the link. Also there is much confusion over this since brands like ] and ] are really operated by ] and ], there is no dba involved. If the decision was to keep it simple and just list the name of the airline on the ticket I would not object. ] 23:19, 5 October 2005 (UTC)
*On the city names and links, it seems to be policy to list the cities without links. Is this no longer acceptable or am I missing something? The important point is that in airport articles, the destination cities are always listed the same in all articles. ] 23:25, 5 October 2005 (UTC)
* Destination airports are usually not wikified. I'm fine with changing that policy, but we should choose to make that the standard, not just do it some places in an ad hoc way. Also, I only disambiguate for airports where both have commercial service. Manchester is an example that deserves disambiguation in any case. The Manchester airport is the busiest in New Hampshire and one of the reliever airports for Bostan's Logan (along with TF Green in Providence). Take a look at the ]. Perhaps there are some places where disambiguation includes an airport with very minor commercial service. For example Rochester (NY) is much busier of an airport than Rochester (MN). ] 00:59, 7 October 2005 (UTC)
==Airline destination lists in airport articles==
Is it time to add a policy to the project page? ] 01:06, 7 October 2005 (UTC)
*Ok, in an attempt to sum up my views on all this a bit...
*#"dba" - confusing terminology which is unnecessary, also lists the airlines in a non intuitive order (the first listed should be the one listed on the ticket, on the gate etc - the one you ''think'' you are flying on). I much prefer "] (])" over "] dba ]" since it gets the info in the right order (and still contains the finer details in the brackets for us guys, but lists the expected airline for everyone else).
*#*Personally I think using ] and including all of the destinations there removes all confusion at the airport level. If you need more detail you sholuld know it will be found at the airline link. ] 18:29, 7 October 2005 (UTC)
*#**I'd be fine with that, but i'm sure most of the folk here doing the edits are the sort of folks that want that info. ] 19:02, 7 October 2005 (UTC)
*#Differentiating using "/" (eg London/Heathrow) - adds confusion, London Heathrow is more straight forward.
*#*The list is of cities, so you need some marker to indicate that what follows is the modifier. Using the "/" or some other character is what I prefer. I don't like the alternative of dropping that marker between the city and airport. ] 18:29, 7 October 2005 (UTC)
*#**My main problem with that is it adds confusion for airports such as Leeds/Bradford and Dallas/Ft Worth, where the slash isn't differentiating. ] 19:02, 7 October 2005 (UTC)
*#***Would the "-" dash work? ] 19:11, 7 October 2005 (UTC)
*#Disambiguation of city names, not wikilinking - fair enough <br>] 10:46, 7 October 2005 (UTC)
**I'm moving this list to the ] so we can all change it to reach a concensus. Discussions should remain here. I also made this part of the discussion a heading and adjusted indents. ] 18:05, 7 October 2005 (UTC)
*How about this as a compromise. London/]. I know we are avoiding links here, but maybe the airport ICAO code link would be short and clarify to anyone who needs more information which airport it is. ] 00:28, 11 October 2005 (UTC)
**Almost nobody knows what the ICAO code is. I certainly don't. The IATA airport code (LGW) is much, much more common, not to mention intuitive. But just saying London Gatwick would be far more straightforward. I've come around to Wangi's way of thinking. Houston Hobby, London Gatwick, New York Kennedy, etc. ] 18:15, 11 October 2005 (UTC)
**Ditto, ICAO urgh! :) Only the Canucks know them! I still think using the "conversational" version is the best way forward, and after that '-' is better than '/'. ] 20:13, 11 October 2005 (UTC)
** I agree IATA would be better than ICAO. I generally think a dash might be the best bet at this point. I don't like putting nothing. Otherwise for example "San Jose del Cabo" might very well be interpreted as "del Cabo" airport in San Jose. I also generally would much prefer to see JFK as opposed to Kennedy. It is both shorter, and I think it is more recognizable. ] 20:50, 11 October 2005 (UTC)
***I disagree (I am a "Canuck" though). The ICAO code is more precise, global, and is the standard that North America is migrating to. In time, IATA codes will become obsolete. Further, I see no problems with ICAO because often the only difference is a 'K' or 'C' in front of the North American IATA code - seems pretty easy to figure out the difference to me. -] | ] 00:26, 12 October 2005 (UTC)
****Hang on here! ICAO and IATA codes have different purposes and uses. One does not replace the other. IATA codes are used for ticketing and are what is in the GDS's and the airlines ticketing and space systems, and in computing and publishing fares, fare basis, and routing. They are also used on baggage routing. ICAO codes are used for navigation, dispatch, operations, and for SITA and other communications. The IATA codes are widely known by passengers and check-in counter agents (which is the context of destination information in airport articles), whereas ICAO codes will just be confusing in that context. ] 04:52, 12 October 2005 (UTC)
*****The regular ol' Joe would better recognize the IATA code rather than the ICAO code since it's what they see on their tickets and baggae tags. It's also the code that most locals use when talking about their home airport. I don't think I've ever met anyone outside of aviation who knows about the ICAO codes, and the reason for a wikipedia article is to have information everyone can understand. Most people couldn't tell you what RJAA is, but I bet most people could identify NRT as Tokyo. Also, I've never heard of ICAO being more global... everyone I speak to worldwide (penapls and family) seems to know their local IATA codes better than their ICAO codes. As for it becoming "the norm" in North America, that's not true of the US. It's really only used in technical terms, like ops sheets and ATC. You'd never see an airport departure screen say New York/KJFK or Chicago/KORD it always says just JFK or ORD. ] 08:06, 12 October 2005 (UTC)
*****Wait, wait, wait!! When one needs to identify an airport for weather ICAO is used, when one needs to identify and airport on a GPS ICAO is used and these GPS devices are made and programmed in the US. As far as being useless that’s incorrect. But I do agree that most pilots will identify an airport technically by its IATA code (in Canada because the "C" is assumed). Also this is and "Encyclopaedia" and needs to list all info. To drop one or the other is removal of information someone might be looking for. We should have both. When I teach ground-school I have to list the ICAO because of TC standards. Arguments all around... my vote is to use both. If the Americans are concerned about IATA and ICAO allow us Canucks to list both because in our ] it, lists the ICAO not IATA. Besides both organizations are head-quartered in Montreal anyways... so as far as anything being "Canadian" both are located in Canada, with the Euro office in Switzerland.--] 04:21, 14 October 2005 (UTC)
****** I agree we shoud list both. ] 05:15, 14 October 2005 (UTC)
****** An airport's page will list both ICAO and IATA codes, but that's not what we are discussing here. We are discussing how to differentiate airports in the same city. For example "London Heathrow", "London-Heathrow", "London/Heathrow", "London LHR", "London EGLL", or ...<br/>In general I think "London Heathrow", but in some cases the IATA code has a life of its own - "New York JFK", "Paris CDG". ] 09:10, 14 October 2005 (UTC)


::::::More people also say DFW, not Dallas/Fort Worth; Cincinnati, not Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky; Raleigh, not Raleigh/Durham; Baltimore, not Baltimore/Washington; and Minneapolis, not Minneapolis/St. Paul. ] 04:50, 22 June 2006 (UTC)
*In an attempt to try and see if we have some consensus here is a summary. There are two issues being discussed and I'll list them below so that comments can be directed to each one. ABout the only issue is regional service. ] 18:25, 14 October 2005 (UTC)
::::::DFW, CVG, RDU, BWI and MSP are airports that serve two major cities. This is different from JFK, where it is one airport of a city having multiple airports. ] 05:57, 22 June 2006 (UTC)
**Including dba or similar formatting for the airlines in the destination section of airport articles. There appeared to be no objections to dropping this and just listing the airline directly. ] 18:25, 14 October 2005 (UTC)
***My opinion is to combine them since most users only know they are booked on Foo Airlines. They don't know that their flight happens to be on Foo Airlines Express. It also allows one destination list, so there is no need to keep up on what plane is used to fly to a given destination or that both mainline and express service is provided to some airports.
***Another case is multiple names with one certificate. For airports that don't have United flights, but only Ted flights list them as Ted and include a "United (see Ted)" entry. ] 18:34, 14 October 2005 (UTC)
**How to list a city with multiple airports in the destination section of airport articles. The options appear to be "London Heathrow", "London-Heathrow", "London/Heathrow", "London]", "London ]". Using the IATA or ICAO codes is problamatic because not everyone knows them (including ones like JFK!). However by linking these we add only a few links and everyone can find out which airport this is without doing much and the entries length is kept short. This also is an easy standard to put in place, the choice of what to use is clear cut. The other option is to use some variation of the airport name like the three for Heathrow above. This is not as clear cut since the airport name used locally may not be what others around the world might use (Kennedy vs. JFK).


== Charters ==
Can we try and get some agreement on the naming issue? How about a quick poll - put your name under the choice you think best/] 09:14, 20 October 2005 (UTC)
*Conversational, e.g. "London Heathrow":
**] 09:14, 20 October 2005 (UTC)
*City-Name, e.g. "London-Heathrow":
**
*City/IATA, e.g. "London/LHR":
**
:The seperator to use is being discussed at ] below. I would have no problem using Heathrow IF, we can agree on standard names for all airports. Going back to the NYC example, do we use Kennedy or JFK? NYC is a good example since it also has LaGuardia. The NYC destination also includes Newark. And for a point of reference, airline schedules typically identify these three airports as 'K' (I think that is what was used), 'L' and 'E'. ] 16:37, 20 October 2005 (UTC)


Should the destinations of charter airlines be listed in the airport articles? Take ] for example. There are separate listings for the terminals, and there are notations whether the destinations are scheduled or charter. I personally think this is just plain messy. Besides, charters do not have permanent routes, that's why they aren't scheduled. Then if that is the case, then why list their destinations? Would it be preferrable if we just list the charter airlines that operate out of a certain airport on a separate subheading, without the cities listed, regardless on (in MAN's case) whether they operate from T1 or T2? ] 00:32, 16 April 2006 (UTC)
== How to list an airline using multiple terminals ==


==]==
How should you list an airline that is in multiple terminals? At ] they were in the terminal most commonly used and then a (see above) or (see below) in the lesser used terminal. Now someone has chnaged this so that Southwest is listed in Terminal B where they have about 6 flights a day with a (see above) in terminal C where they have about 180 flights a day. Unless it is easy to keep track of the flights by terminals I think the destinations should be listed in one place and secondary terminals should have a (see xxxx) comment. Maybe a (see terminal x for list of destinations) rather then the see above. ] 01:35, 10 October 2005 (UTC)
Could you look at that article. I don't think that it is improved by having all those images down the side. I could see having the St. John's logo but all the airline logos distract. What does anyone else feel? ] ] 15:04, 1 May 2006 (UTC)
*For consistency I think it makes sense to have the flights listed under the first terminal in the list, then "see above" for all others. ] 13:33, 20 January 2006 (UTC)
:They look terrible, and there's no reason for them to be there. ] 15:28, 1 May 2006 (UTC)
::It's also an inappropriate use of fair-use images - the logos. We cannot argue fair use, so they should go... /] 15:36, 1 May 2006 (UTC)
:::Thanks. ] ] 23:09, 1 May 2006 (UTC)


==Codeshares==
==Official/Commonly used airport names==


I know that in WikiProject Airlines, it says that codeshares should not be listed for the secondary carrier. And I am following that. However, one editor insists on putting codeshares on the page for ]. I am currently in a content dispute with him, me being against the inclusion of codeshares, and he being for it. Could someone act as a third party to this? ] 02:03, 8 May 2006 (UTC)
What is the practice regarding the name of the airports? This primarily concerns Canadian airports as I have no clue outside that area. The ] (CFS) says on page A4:


: I agree with your approach and have tentatively added the following to the policy:
"] is responsible for all Canadian civil aeronautical information, however, the Canadian Aviation Regulations make it mandatory for aerodrome operators to report all changes to the CFS information to the Minister of Transport."


:: Do not list secondary carriers for ] flights. For example, if Air New Zealand operates a domestic flight under its own flight number and an additional Singapore Airlines codeshare, the codeshare can be noted for the Air NZ flight but this should ''not'' be listed as a Singapore Airlines flight.
The rest of the paragraph explains how to do that.


:::Actually, the code shares should only be listed as a general comment on the airlines' article. I thought we had reached agreement on this a while ago. The decision was that the destinations should only list destinations for the carrier that flys the airplane on the route. ] 04:37, 8 May 2006 (UTC)
Now the problem is that many airports appear to have more than one official name which may or may not be reflected in the article. An example of this is ], which is the ] name for the airport. The CFS listing is Toronto/Lester B. Pearson International Airport, which in this case is not reflected in the article. It was moved to its current name from the CFS listing to the GTAA name. This is just one but there are several others ] - Sudbury Airport, ] - Fort St. John Airport.
:::That's what I thought as well. I believe it is not necessary to list the codeshare info even for the primary carrier. As ] said, destinations should only list the cities in which the metal of the actual airline flies to. ] 11:45, 8 May 2006 (UTC)
::::Hi. The metal of the actual airline flies to? So would you explain DAB convention if your premise were right, Mr "contribute, contribute, contribute!"? Thank you. ] 13:00, 8 May 2006 (UTC)


::::Is name-calling really necessary here? I find it ironic that you express thanks after calling me names. ] 12:27, 8 May 2006 (UTC)
My feeling is that the article should have one name and the info box should have the other but I'm not bothered which way round. ] 21:44, 12 October 2005 (UTC)


: The rationale is simply that this avoids unnecessary clutter and confusion, as no Singapore Airlines planes will ever fly the route in question, it's just a bit in a reservations database somewhere. Comments welcome. ] 04:17, 8 May 2006 (UTC)
*I think the correct way to handle this is to include the other names '''bolded''' at the beginning of the article and have these other names be a redirect to the article. ] 22:49, 12 October 2005 (UTC)


::And the different between a codeshare and an operated-by is that eg. ] flights use Song metal but have only Delta flight numbers. It would be a codeshare if there was a primary Song flight number ''and'' a secondary Delta flight number. ] 04:32, 8 May 2006 (UTC)
I halfheartedly agree with Vegaswikian, but it does get quite verbose at times. At any rate, I'd be inclined to use the CFS title over the local airport authority's title, if only because it's easier to standardize. -] | ] 05:57, 15 October 2005 (UTC)


Hi. It seems quite similar between a codeshare and an operated-by, even your explanation is inambiguous. Accoring to the part of the sentences, which you deleted just before stating "your" rulles on codeshares:
] is a good example of that. The problem right now is that there is no standard of airport names (see above) and I don't know if we could get one. ] 19:28, 18 October 2005 (UTC)


# US Airways (Destinations)
== Specific airport airlines template? ==
* US Airways operated by America West Airlines (Destinations)


it could be understand as the codeshares convention. I believe it would be helpful if there are description about codeshare flights with clarity. Codeshare flights information does not seem to be unnecessary clutter and confusion, rather vital important info at any "airports" If codeshare flights info seemed to be clutter, it would be a matter of expression or structure of conventions. Comments welcome. ] 19:25, 8 May 2006 (UTC)
Would anyone mind if we moved the section about all the airlines into a template that was included in the article? I don't mean a parametarized template, merely a subpage of the airport article that is included inline using the template syntax. The reason for my request is that I watch several airport articles, yet have zero interest in airlines and their respective destinations. For an airport like ], the vast majority of edits are to the airlines/destinations list, if I could ignore these edits that on my watchlist that would be great (they also consume a lot of space on the page history). I'm not saying that its not a worthy section of the article by any means, I would just like a way to sort of separate the two subjects so that those wikipedians who want to focus on only one or the other can do so. There's no difference from a reader's POV, and from an editor's the main dif is that you'd have to use the section "edit" button instead of the article "edit" button. What do people think? -] | ] 06:05, 15 October 2005 (UTC)
*I believe that for airlines, you can just create a destinations page. Not sure how that would work for an airport. If you are asking if it would be OK to have an airport specific template for airline destinations, then I'd say the answer is no. Generally single use templates are a reason to delete the template in ]. ] 06:18, 15 October 2005 (UTC)
**There is the possibility of making a separate "Airlines and nonstop destinations" page, but I think this information is valuable enough to enough people that it should be included in the main article. And yes, I am proposing an airport specific template for airline destinations, but I don't ''think'' there will be problems with it. For starters it's not really a template, especially since its not in the template namespace. The better way to think of it is a subpage of the article that is included inline using the template syntax. -] | ] 18:14, 15 October 2005 (UTC)
***A subpage would be much better then a template. Before you start on that we probably need to decide on when a subpage is needed and resolve the major heading used. I know of destinations being listed under '''terminals''' which I think is the most common and under '''airlines''' at others, usually the smaller airports. What metric would you suggest to say the terminal/airline/destinations would have to meet to get a ''destinations'' page? What would the subpage be called, ''Foo Airport direct destinations''? ] 21:10, 15 October 2005 (UTC)
* Cannot see the reason - as it is the section edit can be used. Perhaps if you could give a demo? ] 22:09, 15 October 2005 (UTC)
** Ok, I've done up a proof-of-concept at the ] article. Compare the old version with the new . To the reader, they look identical. However, I've basically extricated the airlines information from the article and placed it in a new subpage: ]. This subpage is then included inline in the article where the content formerly appeared. How does this change the mechanics of editing? Well first off, changes to the subpage wont appear on the watchlists of those only watching the main article, and changes to the main article wont appear on the wachlists of those only watching the subpage. If, while viewing the main article, an editor clicks the "edit this section" link, he is directly taken to editing the subpage. Unfortunately, the downside of this technique is that if one clicks the edit button at the top of this page and is hoping to edit the airlines section, all one sees is the template syntax for including the subpage. Reading back over this, it sounds pretty complicated, but go check out the proof-of-concept implementation I've made and see what you think. -] | ] 05:05, 16 October 2005 (UTC)
***I will say that is an interesting result. Like you said, the article edit is one potential issue. ] 06:00, 16 October 2005 (UTC)


:Hi. Sorry for overlooking your constructive idea that what I would had in the dispute with Mr.Elektrik blue 82.
== Standardisation - ] ==


* Delta Airlines operated by Korean Air (Seoul-Incheon)
Huaiwei, I see you have reverted my edits which standardised the infobox and the desination lists. The ] project exists to improve the airport articles on Misplaced Pages and give them a consistent style.
* Korean Air (Busan, Jeju, Seoul-Incheon)
it would look like this:
* Korean Air (Busan, Jeju, Seoul-Incheon), codeshare for Delta Airlines


It seems to be reasonable. However, it is ambiguous which destination is codeshared or not based on the proposed convention. In addition, codeshared flights are sometimes scheduled from different terminals/wings. Your proposed idea might another confusion instead of clarity.
The standard infobox - ] - contains much less information. It is intended as a quick source of facts.
Codeshared information does not seem to be little as you said especially when we check out flights using FFPs, such as OneWorld, StarAlliance, SkyTeam and so on. ] 20:55, 8 May 2006 (UTC)
:But if an airline does not fly the given route (or doesn't even fly to that airport in many cases), then listing it is misleading. First of all, there's the question of which terminal the flight should be listed under - the operating airline or the codesharing airline? Codeshares are for marketing purposes. The only reason US Airways is listed US operated by HP is because the two airlines merged and are in the process of merging their flight operations. America West is no longer listed as a separate airline. ] 09:54, 8 May 2006 (UTC)


Destination lists on every other arport page include the airline name (with link) and a list of the destinations they fly to directly. The table format used in this article contains far too much information - information that should be on the airline's page.


::Thank you, Mr. Fairness. I understand that codeshares are for marketing purposes. And so what? The point should be whether articles are useful or not. Codeshare flights info will not be misleading if the appropriate convention is installed. The followings are some idea abouts codeshared flights:
Please can we continue this discussion at ] (I have copied this message there).


(Type 1)
Regards/] 15:55, 17 October 2005 (UTC)
* ] (Bangkok, Beijing, Brisbane, ... Sydney)
**(Paris-Charles de Gaulle) operated by ]
**(Auckland, Christchurch) operated by ],
**(Dallas/Fort Worth) operated by ] ...


(Type 2)
:It was not a revert of the infobox, but a restoration of the old infobox into seperate ones which I dont think is the business of this project to delete. Sure, I fully understand the need to standardise information, and hence I did not touch the new infobox, but as for the remaining information, I dont see any reason why work to add more information in any one airport should be removed just because other airport pages lack them.
* ]
**(Seoul-Incheon) operated by ]


Hope you are not the guy who oppose anything without an alternative. Welcome comments.] 22:50, 8 May 2006 (UTC)
:The same applies to the destination lists. First, there was an effort by one project member to delete statistical information. (] and ]). There were comments made that this table is "sufficient" for the purpose the tables were supposed to provide. I suppose now even this table is considered overwelming?


How about:
:The aviation business is one basically about numbers, besides gleaming metal and girls with plastic smiles handing you trays. By the fact that my academic speciality was on international transportion (my "mini thesis" for my final year was just about one plane make), I should have been a part of this wikiproject. But when it is staffed by some members who seem most determined to create slick presentation at the expense of information, I see no reason hence why I should be playing a part in it.--] 16:34, 17 October 2005 (UTC)


(Type 3)
::I was one of the people who put those articles up for deletion. I don't consider the information encyclopedic. That data also would appear to be difficult to maintain since that type of information is always changing. Are those tables filled in and accurate for today? In general the wiki guidance in that case seems to be to point to a site that has and updates the data.
* ] (Atlanta)
* ] (Seoul-Incheon)


i.e. Leave it as it is.
::One quality of an encyclopedia is consistency. It sounds like you are saying that this is not good and that you have a right to do as you see fit. Well, you do, and others can take exception to what you do by changing what they consider to be not the best way to do something. An infobox is intended to display common data across several pages. So if you are proposing using those infoboxes, they probably should be discussed here to determine ttheir utility.
Another issue with codeshares is that on short-haul flights (especially US domestic), where 3 or more airlines may have their code on a flight, it would cause airport articles to be pointlessly long. Destination lists in O'Hare and DFW would probably double, since Air China and Star Alliance members codeshare with United on many flights, as do Alaska Airlines and oneworld carriers with American. If an airline doesn't fly to an airport, it shouldn't be listed. ] 12:58, 8 May 2006 (UTC)


:I'd vote for '''(Type 3)''' per ]'s stated reasons. ] 13:09, 8 May 2006 (UTC)
::Given their past history, I wonder what the article cleanup team would do to ] if they were made aware of it?


:Agreed, keep things as-is and do not list codeshares. And I'll up your total... Here at ] it's not unusual to have six (or more) codeshares on a flight... /] 13:09, 8 May 2006 (UTC)
::As to the terminal list. This is an article about the airport and not about details of the airlines who use the airport. The airline articles should include details specific to their operations. The airline code is associated with the airline and not needed in an airport article. The few who need it already know it or can link to the airline where it is located ay the top of that article. It is not encyclopedic to show when every airline started service at the airport. For the few that are important, they should be included in the history section. The number of flights is not encyclopedic and should not be included. Code shares should not be listed since the airline does not fly those routes. The destinations listed by terminal are what the airline actually flys. The concessus here is to not add code shares since they are difficult to maintain and don't really improve the quality of the article. Again, this is not a travel site, like ].
:Clearly Type 3, per Dbinder. It would be uselessly duplicative to list every single destination that United flies to from San Francisco under the "US Airways" heading - but just about every United flight from SFO also carries a US code. Also an ANA code, a Thai code... you name it. There is a clear distinction between the "operated by" subsidiary listings and codeshares. Flights listed as "ABC Airways operated by XYZ Airlines" are more-or-less seamlessly marketed and operated as one airline brand image, but operated by a different operating entity for various reasons. United Express flights are branded as United, even though there's about six or seven airlines flying for United Express. Codeshare flights are not branded as the code-placing airline, but are branded as the operating airline. ] 21:49, 8 May 2006 (UTC)
::Based on the support for the current arrangement, I'll modify the project page to reflect this in a few hours. That will allow for objections before any changes. ] 23:01, 8 May 2006 (UTC)


Well, thanks to explanation by other wikipedian but Mr. Elektrik blue 82, who just showed his agreement, I got it. It becomes too redundant for major airports in the US and Europe for codeshare listing. However, from passengers views (not nerds views), knowing the fact "ABC Airways operated by XYZ Airlines" seems less meaning than knowing the codeshared flights when you go to airports. Thus, it still supposed to be demands for codeshare flights in the future. Then, I wonder how do WikiProject Airlines wikipedian solve it. ] 02:55, 9 May 2006 (UTC)
::Disparaging other wikipeidans is not the wiki way. To say that everyone else does not care about providing information is completely off base. I have not seen anyone try to suppress encyclopedic information. In fact, the project has adjusted to try and resolve disputes, generally by adding to what can be included if an article proves the need to include more.


:Well Misplaced Pages isn't a travel guide. If someone is confused on who they're actually flying with then the airline isn't doing their job right. In the franchise scenario ("ABC Airways operated by XYZ Airlines") it makes sense to include the additional information on who is actually operating the flight since the flight is operated on their planes, under their AOC and under their insurance etc - that's encyclopedic. /] 09:32, 9 May 2006 (UTC)
::The fact that your thesis is somehow involved does not matter in this discussion. ] 18:55, 17 October 2005 (UTC)


== Over the top tech info ==
::I'll also add that the information in those tables is, if not wrong, misleading at best. I checked one entry for Air New Zealand to Rome which you list as a code share. Yes, this is in fact correct. However the restrictions on that code share is for connecting service only. You can not fly that route and it is not offered so it should not even be listed except under Singapore Airlines. But even their listing code share routes is not suppoted. ] 19:12, 17 October 2005 (UTC)


What's your opinion on full airfield details within an article? For example as is the case with ]? Thanks/] 22:03, 10 May 2006 (UTC)
:::I'll echo a lot of that. The destination tables are confusing and simply full of too much information - it should be in the airline page (codes) or is worthless (code share). Additionally it is very hard to read - strings of airport names without punctuation. I'm going to revert back to the changes I made yesterday.
:I don't think it should be included, for several reasons: (1) it's not really encyclopedic information, which is summary in nature, rather than an attempt to be a primary source, and ]; (2) the information can be obtained from sites like AirNav, FlightAware, Skyvector, AirportsA-Z, etc., which can be presented in the ''External links'' section as direct links; and (3) unlike things like runway headings, which don't change often, the other technical info does change, it is a burden to keep up to date, and pilots should not be relying on Misplaced Pages for critical technical information such as frequencies, magnetic deviation, etc. ] 22:47, 10 May 2006 (UTC)
:::Okay, you didn't revert the complete infobox - rather you put back in everything else that was stuck onto it in individual sections. An encycplopedia isn't about dry numbers and stats, that's a spreadsheet! Most of these stats are largely meaningless - I mean what on earth is the use of knowing how many km of takiways (and their width)? I recommend you do a bit of reading around WP and read up on the view that many have about infoboxes - they are good you quick facts, is stops being info when there are reams of it - it should be rewritten as a paragraph.
::I agree. This is information that is not of general interest. For those that have an interest, there are better sources that they should be using and probably know about. If it is a concern that the links need to be available, then maybe they can be added to the information templates that are used to generate the links. ] 23:01, 10 May 2006 (UTC)
:::The awards and accolades section also needs attention - it reads like an ad for the airport. Recent changes to the ] page covered similar ground by splitting off the section to a sub-article and I think that would be an improvement here too.
:::Singapore Airport is the business of this project as much as it is your business - a lot of people contribute to the project in an attempt to improve ''all'' airport articles with consitent style. No one is attacking your knowledge - we're just trying to improve things| And you are welcome to join us.
:::Thanks/] 15:36, 18 October 2005 (UTC)


== Tri-Cities Airport vs. Tri-Cities Airport ==
:I think I am much too dissapointed to bother about this anymore. Feel free to delete the page eventually if you guys decide the airport itself isnt important enough for wikipedia. I suppose I shant contribute much to this page anymore least some people deem its "not important" and delete it in a matter of seconds, erasing hours and hours of work.--] 09:01, 20 October 2005 (UTC)
::Huaiwei, this is a collaborative effort. ] 09:07, 20 October 2005 (UTC)
:::The current Project's infobox is really inadequate. At the minimum, it should contains the (1) handling capacity (passenger), (2) Parking bays (for aircraft), (3) date of opening (4) #Passenger, (5) # Cargo handled (6) # Aircraft served. The airport is not merely a coordinate or some concrete strips; rather, an airport is a transportation service hub, and hence information on its services are essential and should be included as quickfact. Is there any reason why these are not included in the Project's infobox? The country's infobox is more elaborate and problems (due to the size) have being resolved; so size should not be a reason why airport's infobox should not be expanded to contain these essential and interesting quickfact. Growth is good, right? :D --] 10:05, 27 October 2005 (UTC)
::::I think those suggestions should be on ] where the previous discussions are, including a discussion of at least one of your suggestions. ] 21:40, 27 October 2005 (UTC)


The ] article refers to the "]" but unwittingly refers to the Tri-Cities Airport KPSC in Pasco, Washington State as opposed to the "correct" Tri-Cities Airport KCZG in Endicott, New York State. What is the procedure for creating a new page for the Tri-Cities Airport in Endicott? Besides the GBA page having an incorrect link, so does the ]
::::Meant to reply earlier today - yeah check the infobox sub page Vegas' link above, but remember to read the archives linked from the top of it - all the interesting discussion will be in them. Thanks/] 22:05, 27 October 2005 (UTC)
*OK, I think this is cleared up now. If you look at ], it is now a dab that should clear this up. For the record, I found three airports using that name. I cleaned up several articles, and I think things are straight now. To create the article, just click on the red link. ] 02:51, 14 May 2006 (UTC)
:::::I'm disappointed with this page, used to have so much information, but now its gone. What a WASTE!!! I wish you Vegaswikian and wangi, from good info, but making it so short! I wish you just don't be so self-scented, and at least discuss, what standardisation is this! Can't some articles be different from others. I don't like the current revision of this article. This is a ] article, and you are being very selfish, extremely selfish. I hope you can put back that table in place, and just kindly leave, and let other users of the project handle this! And also to that, you have made a stir with SGPedians. Thanks to you guys. I can't beleive this. Why out of a number of users in the project, only two are doing this. The more information the better, right? Can you please do not intefere with the article, and I will also copy the table from the old edit, and put it in the LATEST ADDITION and DO NOT change it! ] 15:27, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
::::::There aren't that many people in this project, and of course as volunteers they are spread thin and can't all focus on this one thing. Anyway, more information is not always preferred on wikipedia. Would it be appropriate to list what some politican ate for lunch last week? If you feel that this information should be in wikipedia, please do explain. Also, please focus on discussing issues related to the article, and don't attack other users personally. In any case, there is a lot of debate about what an airport page should look like. I encourage you to join in the discussion here -- the more people we have thinking about such things, the better. ] 19:08, 20 November 2005 (UTC)
::::::: ] commented ''Reverted to Terenceong1992. Where is the guideline forcing the removal of all such content?'' while reverting to the table again (and loosing edits made to the list since). I can only point back up this discussion to ]'s long comment near the start... Both ] and ] seem to be of the opinion that ''more is better'', while I think the rest of us agree that is not the case - ] is the only airport which listed codeshares, these are not useful in this day and age of mega-alliances. Additionally the table was riddled with 'N/A' entries too. The list format is concise, more accurate, easier for passenger reference (i.e. it where they can fly to directly from the airport, indirectly they can fly anywhere in the world anyway), plus also easier to maintain. Thanks/] 09:41, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
::::::::I am not going to make any edit war or things like that. The rest of us? Who? I would want to know. Did you know that before you guys (] and ]) came in, there was no conflict. I don't see other members of the project, in this discussion or going to edit the article. I think I will start a debate on this on my talk page as a subpage. However, no one must not make any personal attacks on anyone, and we will end the debate when the two parties can agree. Also, we are one whole community. ] 11:42, 21 November 2005 (UTC)


== Essential air service ==
::::::::Wangi's comment above leaves me wondering just how familiar he is with the aviation business. Codeshares arent redundant due to global alliances. Dont assume all flights by all member airlines in the same alliance are codeshared. The fact is they arent. Member airlines in an alliance continue to forge codeshare agreemens, and no codeshare exists if they dont formalise anything. SIA, for instance, has yet to codeshare on a single flight with Thai International despite being in the same alliance. Hence, why should codeshares be removed? Just because plenty of "NA" exists because there arent codeshares?


I was starting to add a reference to ] to those airports covered by this program but stopped when I thought a category might be better for this. Comments? ] 16:31, 19 May 2006 (UTC)
::::::::I am not so sure why comments like "rest of us agree" here, when the so-called "rest of us" constitutes no more than 5 people here. As far as I can see, it is not merely Terenceong1992 and me who resisted this attempt to remove information from the Changi article. I suppose by this comment, you are ignoring Vision's statements? Or all those members who voted to keep articles related to Changi's passenger statistics? Why this dismissive and high-handed attitude? I dont see how a "discussion" can take place when people seem to be refusing to acknowledge the existance of the opposing party and their viewpoints.
*I think it's probably good both as a category and a brief mention within the article - something like, "Commercial service at XYZ is subsidized through the Essential Air Service program." ] 09:39, 20 May 2006 (UTC)
**OK, I added the cat and will slowly add the airports. At a later date we can go in and modify the text that should be easy using the cat as a list to work from. ] 19:14, 21 May 2006 (UTC)


==]==
::::::::I also detect a tinge of hypocracy. Strange that "easier for passenger reference" should exists, as thou wikipedia's airport articles are meant to be read by air travellers? Isnt that the role of wikitravel, the very same comment made when trying to remove the more comprehensive table? The comprehensive table is obviously not geared towards air travellers, and is hardly useful for wikitravel. So just who is trying to write an article for wikitravel now?
Can someone look at . I have changed it back and asked the editor what the problem with it was. Am I wrong in thinking that the ] is a source rather than a see also? I really don't feel like changing 1300+ airports. ] ] 01:22, 22 May 2006 (UTC)
*Personally, if you used it as a reference, it is a reference. ] 06:05, 22 May 2006 (UTC)
*It's a reference. "See also" is for related articles, such as an article about another airport in the same city. ] 12:55, 22 May 2006 (UTC)
::Thanks for the reply. The user hase a good point as to why he changed them, see ]. If I change the reference to read "Canada Flight Supplement effective day/month/year" for all of them every 56 days will ensure that they are all up to date. ] ] 13:48, 22 May 2006 (UTC)
:::You could always use a template for adding the reference. That way one change and you have updated 1,300 articles. ] 22:20, 22 May 2006 (UTC)
::::Thanks. That's the way to go. ] ] 23:28, 22 May 2006 (UTC)


== User adding flags to destination lists ==
::::::::A list is only as accurate as how we want it to be. Saying something should be removed for being inaccurate is like saying all wikipedia articles which have elements of inaccuracy should be deleted. A concise list? Yes of course. But tell me if it is useful if you want to have a guage of traffic flow and level of connectivity from this airport? The table is difficult to maintain? Are you able to predict that others like myself have no time for wikipedia?


] has been adding flags to destination lists, which is a "real bad idea" in my opinion, and goes against the existing format. I've left a commonet on their talk page, but can others help please? Thanks/] 23:04, 23 May 2006 (UTC)
::::::::I am going to restore the table back into that page. Saying there is "concensus" here to remove it as an excuse is a plain lie. Convince us why it should be removed, instead of expecting us to explain why it should remain, because I simply dont see any comprehensive effort in gaining wider community concensus before forcing all articles to conform to a wikiproject dictated by a few.--] 11:50, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
:They are are reverted now. Including the ones that were edited after the anon added the flags. ] ] 00:23, 24 May 2006 (UTC)
::They aren't all reverted. A <i>lot</i> of pages now have them. ] 09:27, 24 May 2006 (UTC)
:::Do we need to address this on the project page? While not a policy, most everyone usually respects the guidelines on project pages and following them keeps editors out of trouble. My concern is the number of hits this can add to the image server. ] 16:59, 24 May 2006 (UTC)
::::I thought I got all the ones that 82.41.21.236 did. Which did I miss? ] ] 17:14, 24 May 2006 (UTC)
:::::I just looked at ] and it has flags, that was the first one I checked. LukaP appaears to be the editor that added those. Contrib history shows a lot of destinations were edited. ] 18:12, 24 May 2006 (UTC)
:Those are done. When I go back to work I'll run through the the airports by category and see what else I can find. Early Saturday morning. ] ] 00:00, 25 May 2006 (UTC)
::I've gone through 3500+ articles from "Category:Airports in country" and not one has "Flagicon" in it. ] ] 22:38, 27 May 2006 (UTC)


== Alliances ==
::::::::I thought the "first round" of this discussion did come to consensus... Anyway, a lot has already been said re the list v table format and redundant information (the place for airline code share info is the airline page) and I think instead it would be more useful if we have a quick straw poll to determine where the consensus actually does lie. Please add your name (<nowiki>~~~~</nowiki>) below your prefered option:


Do you think it would be a good idea to add small size logos next to airlines at airports to represent which alliance they belong to, to show how they are aligned at the airport? ] 16:51, 25 May 2006 (UTC)
*I agree that ] should list airlines and destinations in the standard list format (as used on all other airport articles) as :
:I don't think that's a good idea for the same reason as the flags. They clutter up the page, and more importantly, put quite a strain on the server. ] 16:53, 25 May 2006 (UTC)
: '''agree''': ] 12:08, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
Also might run afoul of fair use. ] ] 16:57, 25 May 2006 (UTC)
*I agree that ] should list airlines, destinations codeshares, date started, number of flights and airline code in a table format as :
: ] 14:37, 21 November 2005 (UTC)


== Citing Through Service ==
:::::::::"First round"? Where? Strange that I, like the others, are routinely directed to this page to see the "concensus", yet I am still unable to locate them till now. Unless of coz you guys think two individuals agreeing with each other in here = "concensus". I suppose "community" in the "community consensus" equation has become redundant here?
I posted this question on the ] and the folks there suggested I ask it here: what is the appropriate way to cite through service? I had added a note about upcoming through service from BWI to Accra, via Banjul -- and that's just how I listed it, with the word "via." Someone removed the "via" and made it look like BWI will soon have non-stop service to both destinations--but the reality is it will be service to Accra, with a stop-over in Banjul. Now, the reason I listed it this way is because that is how it is being promoted, with the expectation that people will buy their tickets primarily for Accra. This is exactly like, say, SAA's flight from IAD to Johanneburg, which stops in Dakar for refueling and a crew change--and while you can buy a ticket for Dakar, most people know it as the flight to Jo'burg.


So should we only list the stop-over point; should we list it as "via," or should we list both destinations separatly (which I find confusing).
:::::::::And I question the use of votes to measure "Concensus". Is this the best we can do in wikipedia? Misplaced Pages is not a democracy as far as I see, and it is arguments which count far more than statistical votes alone. Why this love for hard numbers now, when there was an insistance of removing numbers and statistics from wikipedia and deeming them "unencyclopedic"? I dont think much has been said, and this is far too premature for a voting process when people seem clueless of just what they are voting for.--] 12:34, 21 November 2005 (UTC)


I vote for "via," but with the caveat that this should really only be for long-haul International routes. I think the odd domestic flight that has through-service from a hub to another spoke shouldn't be listed. I think it's just the extraordinary nature of these long-haul flights that makes this valuable info.
::::::::::Oh come Huaiwei, please try to act in good faith. I am trying to show consensus, one way or the other without having this eventually get to ]. A vote does not restrict further comments, or indeed a change in choice. ] 12:50, 21 November 2005 (UTC)


Thoughts?
:::::::::::I have never participated in any discussion until recently, not because of this, but I want to express my opinion. I agree with Huaiwei's comments above. Why do we need a first round, second round and stuff like that? And even a vote?! That is nonsensical! With only a group of five in this talk, and a vote! Once again, so what if Changi is the only airport with the table. As far as I know, you guys are foreigners and i have a feeling that you have not visited Singapore. I think we need an admin to protect that page. Good faith, haha, lol!!!!!! I think getting this to ] is not a good idea.
] 15:22, 31 May 2006 (UTC)
:The format right now is to list direct, non-plane-changing, international destinations (without the "via" designation). I think that's been working pretty well. ] (]) 15:29, 31 May 2006 (UTC)
::I agree adding that you only list destinations where passengers can board or leave the flight. Fuel only stops and the like should not be listed. This does not appear to be that type of exception. Also, the flight number should be the same to all stops. ] 21:24, 31 May 2006 (UTC)
:::To extend this, routes on which a carrier cannot legally carry domestic passengers also shouldn't be listed. e.g. United flies LAX-SYD-MEL, but passengers cannot board at Sydney, so in the Sydney Airport article, only LAX (and SFO) should be listed as a destination. Likewise, at Melbourne Airport, LAX should be listed, but not Sydney. The same goes for Qantas between LAX and JFK. ] (]) 23:14, 31 May 2006 (UTC)
:The section is intended to show cities which the airlines serve, NOT the route info. Thus, having a simple comma between Accra and Banjul DOES NOT and SHOULD NOT imply that there are two different non-stop flights. If that were the implication then what would happen to the numerous European airlines that fly the Hub-BKK-SIN route? Their listings do not imply that they have separate non-stop flights for their hubs and for the other Asian city. What the format right now is perfect as is. ] 23:02, 31 May 2006 (UTC)
::I apologize, but this doesn't seem clear at all--and for the simple fact that the heading of the section is "Airlines and nonstop destinations." That implies that what we read is, in fact, a list of all non-stop flights each airline serves from that airport. (A recent letter to the editor of the Washington Post travel section even suggested using Misplaced Pages to find out JUST THAT INFORMATION, since it's often not readily available on airport websites.) Further, if this is true, then there is a lot of missing information. To wit: a quick check of the current OAG schedule for BWI shows at least three different airlines serving BWI - SEA with direct flights (ie, exactly ONE stop somewhere, but the flight number and equipment are the same, and they clearly have cabotage), yet I don't see Seattle listed as a destination, with or without a comma. If it takes a conversation on the project page to understand that that's what's being communicated (even the talk page of the airport in question didn't know this answer) then how can we claim "the format right now is perfect as is." I think we need to rethink this. ] 02:05, 1 June 2006 (UTC)
:::Well, the structure section on the project page says the heading should be '''''Airlines and destinations''' if only one terminal or terminal(s) not identified otherwise '''Terminals and destinations'''''. So nonstop should not be in the heading. I guess your confusion is one reason why it should not be included in the heading. ] 02:56, 1 June 2006 (UTC)
::::Also, on a one-stop direct flight with a plane change, the OAG schedule will only list the first plane used. In order to check if there is indeed a change, you need to check the two individual segments and ensure they are the same. Even then, there is no guarantee; since the 737 and 320 are the most popular domestic planes, it is quite possible for a direct flight to use one 737 from BWI to, say, ORD, and then another one to SEA, all with the same flight #. ] (]) 13:44, 1 June 2006 (UTC)
:::::OK, then, despite the slight disambuigation of the heading (which could be 100% disambugated by saying, "Airlines and their non-stop and direct destinations") I would argue that we should list only non-stop destinations, period, with the exception of long-haul routes, and then marked with a "via." I think spending the time to determine if a one-stop domestic route between a spoke and another spoke through a hub is indeed the same flight# and equipment is a lot of work, and nowhere near as useful as listing just non-stops--as this information is not always easy to find online, but gives a very good measure of an airport's reach. The one flight a day that just happens to take you without a plane change through a hub is probably more a scheduling fluke, than an idea of either O&D traffic or hub traffic. As I said, the exception I'd propose would be very long-haul international (or maybe even very-long domestic, if it involved, say, flying from Regan National to Anchorage via SEA or somesuch), but then marking it as "via." I think that's an exception worth noting. Deciding which is worth noting this way and which isn't doesn't have to be concrete; it could be left to the contributor to decide, in a "I'll know it when I see it" fashion. Thoughts? ] 13:57, 1 June 2006 (UTC)
::::::Exceptions make it difficult to keep things clear. It is simple to see and verify the direct flights since they are clearly listed on most (all?) airline schedules and route maps. The term 'direct flight' have been used by the travel industry and flighers for service to from point a to point b, so using that as the standard makes sense. Speaking as a past travel agent, the only issue with some customers was that they basically wanted non stop flights. So if you had to offer a direct flight with a stop or two, you had to be up front with that info. ] 17:44, 1 June 2006 (UTC)
:::::::We should continue to list non-stop flights and ignore the "direct" flights that simply happen to be an accident of scheduling an aircraft that passes through a hub. Such "direct" flights are not scheduled on any particular rhyme or reason, and change monthly, weekly and even by the day. They also would radically complicate destination listings - for instance, US Airways had or has a direct flight from Kansas City to Oakland via Phoenix, but no direct service from Oakland to Kansas City! If we were to list spoke-hub-spoke direct destinations, we might as well abandon all hope of ever keeping destination lists up to date because it'll be well-nigh impossible to keep up with the changes. This does not apply to flights such as AQ's LAS-OAK-HNL service, which are scheduled and sold as one-stop direct flights rather than simply being a plane passing through a hub. ] 02:08, 2 June 2006 (UTC)


== Pilot information ==
:::::::::::Why not a debate instead of making this page longer, at a talk page. This article should be the way how to Huaiwei's version. We are SGpedian's, but you are not. And please '''do not''' go and say things that we should be put for atribation and probation, or stuff like that. ] 14:37, 21 November 2005 (UTC)


Anyone else see a problem with information like '''Pilot information''' in ]? ] 05:14, 1 June 2006 (UTC)
::::::::::::Terence, don't worry about the length of this page - it's a talk page and it routinely gets archived, with old/inactive topics being moved to a subpage. The discussion should be done here (or on the airport's talk page) rather than a personal talk page. Most of the discussion is here, so it makes sense for it to continue here.
:I have removed similar information from airport articles. We really don't want Misplaced Pages to try to be a source of instructional material for pilots; it's almost guaranteed to be out of date after a while, and things like approach procedures are not of interest to a general encyclopedia audience. I'd keep the diagram and runway descriptions, though. ] 06:04, 1 June 2006 (UTC)
::::::::::::It does not matter where WP participants are from, I notice you make edits to London Underground articles - do you really think you shouldn't be able to do so since you do not live in London? Please, discuss the issue at hand. Thanks/] 15:13, 21 November 2005 (UTC)


== Help ==
:::::::::::::Erm..that said, lets not become too embroiled in this "I am a Singaporean and you arent" thingy. I dont think sg-related articles are the sole domain of Singaporeans, and we do need input from anyone possible to improve on them. However, I agree on this strange over-obsession in ensuring every single page must conform to the amount of information as is so for other related articles. I know of wikiprojects trying to standardise formatting and general content layout and scope. I have yet to know of any project actually forcing better-developed articles to be shrunk to a size more in-line with less elaborate counterparts. I echo terence's sentiment: So what if Singapore has more detailed information that other airports cannot have? Is standardisation exclusively more important than information? Whats the rationale for this compromise?--] 15:08, 21 November 2005 (UTC)


Hi guys! we are translating article ] from Spanish into English and we're having a hard time finding some word in English. Could someone with technical knowledge give us a hand with the technical stuff? Please, take a look at the questions in ], and maybe keep it in your watchlist for future dubts. Thanks a bunch. ]<small>(]/])</small> 10:40, 14 June 2006 (UTC)
::::::::::::::Having a table of the airlines, destinations codeshares, date started, number of flights and airline code is a good thing, as it will give readers more information of the airport and the airlines, and if anyone is searching Misplaced Pages or via ] or ] as an example, they can know more information of the number of flights that goes to the city per week or whether that airline serves that city. If students or researchers are doing a research of Changi Airport, and they need information such as runway length or very detailed information. It will be a great help to them. Then Misplaced Pages will be a more popular site due to the very detailed information given on most of its articles. A reader will have more knowledge about Changi Airport after reading the article. ] 15:24, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
::::::::::::::::Wangi, though mainly I disagree with you most of the time, I think what you said above is true and I agree. I've been to ] years back, but when I edit the tube articles, I just added the London stations box. I like ] and I hope to go there soon. I think what I wrote earlier made no sense, sorry about that remark. Misplaced Pages is where anyone can edit, so let's don't talk about this kind of You are not and so. ] 15:24, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
::::::::::::::::I'll ask why do we need more detailed information about the airlines on any airport page then even the airlines project is willing to support for the airline articles? I'm having a hard time getting concensus there to keep direct flights on the airline page. The article is about the airport. It is not a place to completely document everything about every airline that flighs into there. This wiki is ]. ] 18:30, 21 November 2005 (UTC)


== Belfast International Airport ==
''(resetting the indents!)''
:Ok, I'll go column-by-column over why I consider the simpler standard list format for airline destinations to be better than the "data rich" table format as used on ].
:*''Airline'': Matches entry in list format - no problem.
:*''Code'': Redundant information which is not of inherent interest in the airport article. The code is listed on the airline's own page, there is no need to duplicate that here.
:*''Since'': It is not encyclopedic to show when every airline started every service at the airport. For the few that are important, they should be included in the history section. Hard to maintain/research (see the large number of ''fill in'' entries in the table).
:*''Operated destinations'': Roughtly matches entry in the list format (non-stop or direct destinations), although formatting is poor (no punctuation) and consensus here is against wikilinking to the city/airport (the place for that is the ''Airline''/''Airline XYZ destinations'' page).
:*''Flights'': Too specific data - hard to keep up to date and correct in the first place (see the large number of ''fill in'' entries in the table). Not encyclopedic.
:*''Codeshare destinations'': Consensus here has been to just list direct and non-stop destinations - the destinations you will see on the monitors if you were to walk into the airport. A list of code shares is hard to maintain (see the large number of ''fill in'' in the table) and is redundant now in an age of mega-alliances. From my local (regional) airport I know I can get code-share flights to just about anywhere I want to go, and it is the same the world over. There is little use in this data, if there was you'd see airport websites listing them too, however what they are (rightly) interested in is direct flights from their airport.


Anyone fancy giving ] a once over... I'm of the opinon that someone within the airport's been editing the article... Thanks/] 21:39, 14 June 2006 (UTC)
:I'd just like to restate Vegas's comment above: "''This is an article about the airport and not about details of the airlines who use the airport. The airline articles should include details specific to their operations''". Even if every airport article had the table format (and that's something this project could have standardised on earlier) I still would prefer the simpler list format - it's the right balance of data. Thanks/] 15:51, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
*I wonder if all of those graphics are a copyvio? Actually most of the timeline is a copyvio from . Can we remove those parts without the copyvio tag being used since it is a copyvio or do we need to tag the entire article? ] 22:41, 14 June 2006 (UTC)
::] says "If some of the content of a page really is an infringement, then the infringing content should be removed, and a note to that effect should be made on the talk page, along with the original source. If the author's permission is obtained later, the text can be restored." So you can remove the offending part without putting up a tag or blanking the whole article. ] ] 23:49, 14 June 2006 (UTC)
:I'll help on this article. --<code>''']]''' </code> 13:37, 18 June 2006 (UTC)
::Cool, I think Vigas has fixed up the major problems, but it could still do with a look. Not got much time myself, but i'll keep a watch on the article's talk page if you're needing anything. Thanks/L/] 21:42, 19 June 2006 (UTC)


== AFD - Latitude and longitude of airports near U.S. cities ==
::I think we should leave it just the way it is. Though i have to say, it is quite hard to find this data sometimes. ] 06:05, 22 November 2005 (UTC)


This ] for ] might be of interest. Thanks/] 13:36, 23 June 2006 (UTC)
:::Sorry Terence, but you'll have to come up with a better reason than that. Many good reasons have been why the current standard format is better for all aiports, and should be used at Changi too - can you give any reasons to support the table format? Thanks/] 09:32, 22 November 2005 (UTC)


== ] ==
::::Ok, would it be safe to assume I can now revert the article to the standard list based format? Thanks/] 12:03, 23 November 2005 (UTC)
:::::Very funny Wangi. Silence dosent neccesarily mean consent. Exercising a little bit of patience will go to great lengths in resolving disagreements, I suppose. I am choosing to delay my reply until we get more comments, all the more so as I am bogged down by matters related to my non-wiki life. No point me repeating my views again and again anyway. Does my delay equate to your liberty in restoring your prefered format as thou you are in a quick hurry to do so ASAP? Whats the rush?--] 12:43, 23 November 2005 (UTC)
::::::I'm just trying to get things resolved, a hiatus isn't good for anyone. I think we've got pretty much all the responses we're going to get without canvasing this to a larger audience (i.e. ]). Huaiwei, I'd appreciate it if you could write (when you get the time) why you prefer the non-standard format over the standard airline/destination list and give rational for each column, as i've done above. We know your views, but it would be good to get reasons and rational (as myself and Vegas' have given). Thanks/] 13:03, 23 November 2005 (UTC)
:::::::Sure, if I may assume good faiths. I am not sure what you mean by "good and rational" reasons thou. Quite obviously, your comments above dont quite fit this criteria either as far as I am concerned, and I would think the opposite is true.--] 13:07, 23 November 2005 (UTC)
::::::::Sorry, can't see where I said that, but anyway if you back up your reasons with good rational then that makes it a good reason in my book ;) Thanks/] 13:49, 23 November 2005 (UTC)
:::::::::Its ok...will let it rest. Hope to come back to this when I am done with a mentally draining course at the end of this week.--] 14:13, 23 November 2005 (UTC)
::::::::::Huaiwei, managed to find the time yet? Thanks/] 12:19, 29 November 2005 (UTC)
:::::::::::Er...thursday can? Whatever time I have left is currently fully occupied by the on-going ]. :D--] 13:11, 29 November 2005 (UTC)
::I'd like to add one more past action that does affect the discussions here. At one time, ] included the airline gate assignments. Those don't change all that often. However around the time the cleanup crew got attracted to the article, that information was removed. You can research the reasons in the discussions, but eveyone accepted that this type of information could be dropped without hurting the quality of the article's information and make it more maintainable and therefore more accurate. Much of what these destnation tables is adding is in the same area. Also, the cleanup team wanted to blow away the destination list completly. They accepted leaving them in place since the project stood behind them since they were maintainable, simple, without links, did not duplicate unnecesary information and were useful. I suspect that pushing an expansion of the destination list will create more problems down the road. ] 17:29, 23 November 2005 (UTC)
:::I think we should now come to a concensus after a lengthy discussion. If there is '''no''' concensus, we will leave it just the way it is. --] <sup>]</sup> 05:59, 11 December 2005 (UTC)


Anyone want to check over the article I've created at ]? Thanks. —<span style="font: small-caps 14px times; color: red;">] (])</span> 16:41, 29 June 2006 (UTC)
Geez now I am back into this conversation after almost forgetting about it. Just hoping my views are still wanted here? :D--] 13:24, 11 December 2005 (UTC)
*I added some comments at ]. ] 17:36, 29 June 2006 (UTC)
:I don't mind your views, you can also discuss at my talk page. :) --] <sup>]</sup> 14:04, 11 December 2005 (UTC)
*Renamed to ]. ] 11:58, 6 July 2006 (UTC)


== ] ==
== Multiple Airports in Same City Disambiguation ==


Can someone look at this article. I just ran into it and it looks US centric. Probably needs a stonger mention of IATA and ICAO. ] 18:29, 29 June 2006 (UTC)
I'd like to see some sort of consensus on how one of several airports in a major city (for example Heathrow in London) should be used. Many people have object to using a slash, because it is also used to list multiple cities (and it's vaguely ugly). I personally dislike having nothing because then its not clear when the city name ends and the disambiguation part begins. For example, San Jose del Cabo could easily get read as del Cabo airport in San Jose. Therefore I propose we move to using a dash. A colon also seems reasonable to me, but I think I like the dash better. Can everyone please weigh in on this? (especially anyone who might get upset by the choice.) ] 05:18, 19 October 2005 (UTC)
:Given no consensus on the word to disabiguate the city, I guess the character used could be decided. Are the only options '/', '-', ':', ' ', and ';'? I guess you could use '@' but I don't think that would look good or read well. ] 05:50, 19 October 2005 (UTC)


==Serves XXX==
== Wikiwings award ==


What exactly is the convention behind the "Serves..." column in the airport infobox? Is it supposed to be the largest city or metropolitan area it is serving? Or is it the city or town where the airport is physically located? Someone is putting Vantaa instead of Helsinki for the case of HEL. And I have seen inconsistencies with other airports, NRT serves Narita (physical location), while KIX serves Osaka (metro area, KIX is located outside Osaka City). ATH serves Athens, FCO serves Rome, but TPE serves Taoyuan City, instead of Taipei. Thoughts? ] 11:27, 30 June 2006 (UTC)
<div style="float:left; margin-right:1em">]</div>
:I was led to believe it's the closest major city; that makes the most sense. So, whatever city is listed on destination lists should be the same (i.e. HEL is listed as Helsinki (Helsinki-Vantaa Int'l), so the airport should be listed as serving Helsinki. ] (]) 13:19, 30 June 2006 (UTC)
Hi all, just thought I'd send a heads up that us 'pedians over at ] have created the wikiwings award. I figured people here might be interested in awarding them too. I've copied the blurb that describes the award below:<br><br>


::Oh, you're now talking about the closest major city, aren't you? Well, did you know that ] is actually bigger than ]? That would then mean that the closest major city IS Vantaa, hence the ] serves Vantaa. ] 14:40, 30 June 2006 (UTC)
The wikiwings are styled after military flight wings, and awarded to anyone who makes extensive, high-quality, or generally valued contributions to the area of aviation on wikipedia. They awarded by anyone, to anyone, in a barnstar-like fashion.
::Look at the population, not just the size. Helsinki beats Vantaa by more than around 400,000 people. I'd had enough of this lack of logic. I'd revert it continually. ] 16:22, 30 June 2006 (UTC)
::: IMHO in addition to cities you can take in account that there are ] also exists - so Helsinki is good name. IMHO, the best Wiki rule here will be "No original research". --] 21:22, 30 June 2006 (UTC)


Yes in English. We use the term ''Pääkaupunkiseutu'' (Capital region). No Helsinki in that name. ] 13:57, 2 July 2006 (UTC)
The wikiwings award is styled after ]'s ] award, and were officially adopted by ] on ], ].
:May I remind you that this is the English Misplaced Pages. Have you ever wondered why the airport is named '''Helsinki'''-Vantaa International Airport? If the closest major city it serves is Vantaa, then why append the "Helsinki" in the first place? I find your enthusiasm to remove "Helsinki" appalling, you even removed it in the list of airports by ICAO codes. ] 16:31, 2 July 2006 (UTC)
<br clear="left"/>


:In that case I need help or else I'll be violating the 3RR rule for the ]. ] 14:09, 30 June 2006 (UTC)
== Question about use of templats ''and'' 'when is a stub not a stub?' ==
::I've made a few edits. Can I suggest engaging the user in discussion on the article talk page rather than the edit history, thanks/] 14:20, 30 June 2006 (UTC)
Hello, I haven't been active in the airports project but have worked on a few airport articles here and there. I have a couple of questions. Firstly when is it appropriate to use the {{tl|AirlineProject}} template? Can it be used on any airport article that needs work, or just those that are actively being worked on? Should it go on the article page or the talk page? Do the participants in the project need to have any ownership in the use of the template?] 12:27, 1 November 2005 (UTC)
: There's nothing hard and fast - if you want to add it, go ahead. Probably of most use on articles that get a lot of edits. It goes on the talk page. ] 12:56, 1 November 2005 (UTC)


I think the problem here is that the template field is ''named'' "closest town" but is ''rendered'' as "Serves". So it's always going to be confusing, because airports are usually built at the edge of metropolitan areas, and the closest town is often something few people outside the area are familiar with, and is not at all the city or region that the airport "serves". (The number of people flying in and out of Helsinki-Vantaa who are coming to or from Vantaa specifically is very small compared to Helsinki or elsewhere in the region.)
Also, would a few of you mind looking at ] for me and tell me whether it should have the stub tag removed or whether it is still a stub. Thanks ] 12:27, 1 November 2005 (UTC)
:Good work, I'd say so. I've made an edit to the page, removing the stub plus also making use of the ] and ] templates. Thanks/] 12:56, 1 November 2005 (UTC)
:: Thanks! ] 23:36, 1 November 2005 (UTC)


Therefore, I think the template field should be renamed "serves" or "area_served" to eliminate this confusion. In the specific case of ] I edited the infobox and inserted what I think is the most useful contents for the field, ]. --] 17:28, 2 July 2006 (UTC)
== Airline flight destination lists ==
*I would like to propose a change in policy with regards to airline destination lists. I believe that ONLY the non-stop destinations an airline serves from a city should be listed, NOT "direct" flights. With many (I daresay most) carriers, "direct" flights are not scheduled on any rhyme or reason, and can change at any given schedule change, or even in the middle of a schedule. Gone are the days when airlines would fly intentional multi-stop itineraries. Virtually every flight today is point-to-point or hub-and-spoke. Listing such "direct" flights will very rapidly become unmaintainable and unwieldy. Non-stops make clear where the airline flies in a place to place fashion, not in a "fly here, then fly there" fashion. ] 23:59, 3 November 2005 (UTC)


== Grand Central Airport ==
: As somebody who comes from the far flung reaches of the globe, i can see a problem with this. Many flights between the Pacific and Europe/The Americas need to make intermediate stops. Currently, all Australia/New Zealand - London/Europe flights need to make an intermediate stop, but the fact remains that most people on the flight are flying from Aust/NZ to Europe. (QF1 SYD-BKK-LHR and the return QF2 are considered institutions by some). This would also be the case for flights connecting New Caledonia/French Polonesia with Paris. Sydney-Vancouver requires a stop in Hawaii, even though the flights are operated by Air Canada and are intended to connect both final destinations. Australia-South America is another case in point. Implementing this new policy would imply that places like Sydney and Auckland don't have flights beyond Hawaii and SE Asia connecting with Europe and the Americas - when clearly, they do! ] 00:36, 4 November 2005 (UTC)
::OK, I see that point... then I would suggest that those certain exceptions be allowed to stand, with notations that the flights are direct, not non-stop. What I'm most concerned about is the addition of "direct" destinations on many US airport listings, where those direct destinations happen to simply be a happy accident of scheduling. ] 02:18, 4 November 2005 (UTC)


]. This historic airport, closed in 1959, had the first paved runway in the western U.S., was the starting or ending point of many record-breaking aviation feats, and was the principal airport of Los Angeles for several decades. Some of its history is in ], but it deserves an article of its own. Anyone interested? -] 07:10, 2 July 2006 (UTC)
There are "direct" flights out there that are marketted to the second destination as well as the first. For example, we can take an American Airlines flight from Dallas to Madrid via Miami, it is marketted as both a flight to Madrid and a flight to Miami and should be listed as one of American's destinations out of Dallas. You then also have American's fifth daily Miami-Houston Flight via Dallas, since Miami-Houston is already four daily non-stops, that fifth flight is not generally marketted as a Miami-Houston flight, but as two separate flights (Miami-Dallas and Dallas-Houston) with the same flight number, this leads to a conflict in removing these one-stop destinations. It comes down to whether or not the second destination is as important or more important than the first? As noted above, SYD-BKK-LHR would have London as the more important destination on the route, and should be listed as London via Bangkok. But since American already flies to Houston non-stop, we don't really need to add Houston AND Houston (via Dallas). ] 18:08, 4 November 2005 (UTC)
:Direct flights, as far as I know, always list all destinations. So they really do belong as long as the flight number is the same. ] 00:31, 7 November 2005 (UTC)
::In that case, every single destination list will have to be radically (and confusingly) expanded and heavily maintained - as I mentioned, "direct" flights end up in random places and change with every scheduling whim... Southwest often offers two-stop "direct" flights. I think there is a good argument to be made for direct international flights being listed, but listing direct domestic U.S. destinations is pointless, unnecessary and confusing. We're not telling anyone anything by listing "Kansas City" among the American Airlines destinations from San Francisco... when the plane is actually going to Dallas. The destination list should mirror an airline route map - showing which flights go where. ] 22:03, 7 November 2005 (UTC)
:::I'm not sure exactly how many changes would be needed. Right now, the lists suffer from a lack of timely updates in a lot of cases. Some of this is because the airlines tend to not advertise when they drop service or switch it from a non-stop flight to a direct flight. If we were to accept what you are suggesting, then we could not list the effect of HP flight 437 from Orange/Santa Ana to Vancouver, Canada. Not doing that would be confusing since it would be different then the actual airlines information. Our information would also be wrong. ] 22:21, 7 November 2005 (UTC)
::::Many, many, MANY changes would be needed - there are numerous examples of direct flights. We shouldn't list that America West flies from Orange County to Vancouver. They don't - they fly from Orange County to Phoenix or Las Vegas to Vancouver. If we were to list direct flights... HP would fly from Oakland to Philadelphia, Baltimore/Washington (oh wait, those two are ending for no reason in December), Atlanta, Dallas/Fort Worth, Washington/Dulles, Pittsburgh, Tampa, Minneapolis/St. Paul, Colorado Springs, Chicago/O'Hare, Puerto Vallarta via two stops, San Diego, Salt Lake City... you see how absurd this gets? Heck, you can fly "direct" Kansas City-Oakland but *NOT* Oakland-Kansas City. Like I said, there is no rhyme or reason to "direct" domestic hub flights other than a temporary scheduling convenience.


== Additional articles listing airlines and destinations ==
::::A destination list should not be a list of random cities that happen to be scheduled to be flown through via a hub - they should be a listing of non-stop flights. Airlines rarely, if ever, switch from non-stop to direct flights - because point-to-point flying is very rare today. Most every flight on network carriers today is flown non-stop to or from a connecting hub. It's important to emphasize the nature of the hub-and-spoke system. ] 23:25, 7 November 2005 (UTC)
:Should this wiki have articles on ] and ]? I think the articles would be very short, but given the number of times they appear it could be reasonable. It would explain the difference. Being at an airport and dealing with travelers, it's amazing the number who don't realize that their direct flight is not non-stop. ] 03:28, 10 November 2005 (UTC)


:'']''
Much of the general public simply cannot decipher between the difference of "Direct flights" and "Non-stop flights" and assumed them to be similar. They cant be blamed, for much of the mass media are similarly confused too. I notice this lack of diffrentiation even amongst academics. Anyway, direct and non-stop flights should be included, because a direct flight has always been considered operationally different from a flight involving a change of plane (actually, it is much more accurate to say the former usually uses the same flight number, while the other tends to involve different numbers). Simple technology is "at fault" for disallowing direct flights between any two points on the planet...while....for now at least, so why penalise airlines and pretend they dont operate to destinations beyond what their aircraft's range? This point may be less relevant to American and European carriers, but it unduly skews the lists against the interests of many Asian and Oceanian airlines/airports. This is like saying the ] should be removed from Australian and London's list just because they must involve stopovers (for now).--] 12:22, 21 November 2005 (UTC)
] wikilinked a few references to ] in some other airport articles, along with full-on wikilinking with a few airport articles. I left a comment on their talk page (ref above) pointing to the standard format we use.
*Specifically referring to US Airways here, their "through international flights" should not be listed because the only thing that's through is the flight number. One *must* change planes to go from a domestic destination through to a European destination via Philadelphia or Charlotte, and not only that, you change terminals too. There are no exceptions. It is not "direct" service, it is "let's pretend this is direct service, but it's really just another connecting flight" service. ] 06:57, 4 February 2006 (UTC)


Following this Josh has reverted the changes on the articles, but has instead created two new articles (] for ]; ] for ]). What's everyones opinion on this?
==Dba vs. (Operating Airline) vs. operated by==


Thanks/] 22:18, 15 July 2006 (UTC)
I believe that it is time that we once and for all create a clear policy for how to indicate flights marketed by one airline and operated by another on these pages. With the extensive use of express/regional airlines, low-fare subsisdiaries such as Ted and Song, and the America West-US Airways merger, there are many locations where one of these titles is necessary. Above, non-American users expressed negativity about the "dba" term. I personally think "operated by" or "Marketing Airline (Operating Airline) are the best options. It is time to reach a firm policy, or this will be inconsisent and constantly being reverted/re-edited by numerous users. What are everyone's thoughts on this? ] 01:08, 12 November 2005 (UTC)
:To follow the guideline in the project. This guideline is generally enough to avoid issues at AfD. Likewise, deletion on AfD is likely if you stray from those guidelines. There are still some editors who are not happy with the destination artcicles so creating a new class of articles could be drawing unwanted attention to these articles. ] 00:52, 16 July 2006 (UTC)
:I strongly agree. "Operated by" is pretty much the de-facto world standard for what appears on tickets, reservation forms, Internet travel sites, itineraries, etc. The use of "dba" (besides being US-centric) is confusing and inconsistent, and describes a ''business'' relationship, not an ''operational'' one. ] 01:15, 12 November 2005 (UTC)
::Thanks, my feeling too... Although i'm not keen on AFDing them just yet. Thanks/] 18:12, 16 July 2006 (UTC)
::So, for example, we would have...
::* ] (Philadelphia)
::** ] operated by ] (Las Vegas, Phoenix)
::*** ] operated by ] (Phoenix)
::** ] operated by ] (Charlotte)
::** ] operated by ] (Philadelphia, Washington/Reagan)
::That looks good to me. ] 03:09, 12 November 2005 (UTC)
:::Except America West Airlines operates their own flights. They happen to be owned by US Airways Group. The HP flights have nothing to do with the flights operated by US Airways, at least for now. How would Ted and Song be listed? They are really just brands for their partent airline. ] 03:16, 12 November 2005 (UTC)
::::I believe 2/3 of the flights are codeshared now, and the rest will be done shortly. The AWA aircraft now carry heritage logo stickers with "US Airways/This aircraft operated by America West Airlines" statements. That's good enough for me.
::::* ]
::::** ] operated by ] (Chicago/Midway)
::::** ] operated by ] (Los Angeles)
::::* ]
::::** ] operated by ] (Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky)
::::** ] operated by ] (Atlanta)
:::: ] 04:03, 12 November 2005 (UTC)
:The America West/US Air merger will eventually result in a US Airways branded airline, so we might as well start showing it as part of US Airways. In the grander scheme of things, it appears that "operated by" is the preferred notation. I think I'll change the project page to reflect this. ] 01:26, 13 November 2005 (UTC)
:::I don't object to using operated by since it makes more sense the longer I think about it. I'm still not convinced that listing Song under Delta or Ted under United is correct. To most passengers, they are flying Ted and not United, they ask about Ted when they ask about directions or for information at an airport. The problem with a simple listing policy is that when you talk about Delta Connection or United Express or American Eagle. In those cases, most, but far from all, passengers will think of the major airline like Delta or United or American and not the regional airline. ] 06:19, 14 November 2005 (UTC)


== External links on ] ==
::I'll update the project page - there is agreement on "operated by", and the Delta/Ted is a separate issue really. ] 13:51, 23 November 2005 (UTC)
:::If you look at a Ted ticket, it says "operated by United Airlines." There is no separate operating certificate, only a separate branding scheme and paint job. ] 00:29, 4 December 2005 (UTC)


I'm currently in a discussion about a link to a page about the Heathrow Visitor Centre. The site is not the official site, does not have any encyclopedic content and has photos which are defaced with a big copyright logo. I cannot see the use in such a link, especially when the parent site is one trying to flog hotel rooms and airport transfers... So, 3rd opinion needed: ]. Thanks/] 18:10, 16 July 2006 (UTC)
== ] ==
:Anyone else got an opinion on this? Thanks/] 11:13, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
I've initiated an attempt to expand the ] article, notably with a list of airport club schemes and locations. Any attempts at expansion (particularly outside of the US) would be helpful. Thanks! ] 00:29, 4 December 2005 (UTC)
*Can you provide a link to the specific section? I just found what looked like the offical site. ] 19:27, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
:Vegas, the disputed original link is , while the official one is . You might want to read the discussion in the talk page and in the edit summaries. ] 19:55, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
::I did look but was having a hard time finding that. In any case, the URL is a commerical site selling travel services. So I consider that spam. I did read parts of the rather long discusion on the talk page and it's clear that this is an issue that is raising tempers. I don't consider the fact that they have an ''information only'' page a factor here. And even that page is spam by virtue of the copyright notice. Maybe we need to add a small comment in the external links topic to cover this. It was done for the airline project to help with similar problems. ] 20:43, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
Vegas, might be useful if you left your opinion on the talk page... Yeah I know, things are getting a bit strained - I know mistakes get made, but in that discussion i'm a boogieman ;) /] 21:35, 17 July 2006 (UTC)


==External links== ==Cargo Airlines==
I was wondering, is there an official policy on listing cargo airlines and destinations currently?
This morning while doing some edits on ] I found that the name of the company that runs the airport (]) redirects to the article. So I tried it as an external link in the infobox. What does anyone else think. I wait to hear others opinons before I do any more in that way. ] ] 10:27, 6 December 2005 (UTC)
Looking at the formating section here, I only saw the format for pax carriers, nothing about freight or regular charters. On all of the airport articles I have edited, I have simply put a sub heading below the pax airlines for the strictly cargo carriers, and then on airports such as BGR, where regular charters and tech stops are common, I have put annother sub heading below that. Also, when looking at the page for CVG, I noticed that many normal Pax carriers were double listed, also appearing under cargo carriers. I have always belived that cargo carriers should only include airlines such as FedEx, UPS, DHL, and their equivilants. It would be a help to have an official policy dictating the listing of cargo carriers here. Thanks for any input. --] 22:11, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
:As in you end up with a recursive link... Sounds like a bad idea to me - better a red link, or no link if the operator isn't notable enough to warrent one. ] 22:07, 10 December 2005 (UTC)
:What additions or changes to the article structure would you suggest? ] 22:41, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
::I'm not bothered about the external link, more the links in the infobox that returns you to the article. It would be better to have no link at all. ] ] 02:49, 11 December 2005 (UTC)
::Well, I think the Cargo Airlines should be set up just as the passenger airlines currently are. The only diference that I see would be that it would be offset as a subheading of the airline section, rather than an entire section to itself. I don't think many real changes need to be made, we just need to agree on the styling and wording, and put it up on the main page. I have annother question though; should cargo carriers use the same style of the major airline, with the carrier below it? There are regional carriers like ] that fly under the fedex and UPS banner, but aren't officially FedEx mainline. Should we classify those the same as Comair and GoJet are? --] 00:07, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
:::I changed the indent level on your reply. The format and rules for listing the airlines should be the same for pax and cargo and anything else. There should be a basic standard that applies and unless what we have does not work, we should continue to use it. I think that cargo needs to be a section since it is really very different from what many people think about when you say airline. I'm not sure what your quetion about Comair and GoJet is? Are you asking about the categories they are placed in? If so, then the answer is to add all that apply. I have added a few for Wiggins. ] 00:22, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
::::I probably could have been more clear on the Comair comment. I was asking whether small feeder lines operating under the FedEx baner should be placed below FedEx and indented, as comercial feeders are. I have been adding Wiggins as a seperate airline...but I now see I probably shouldn't. I agree that what we have now works...but what we have isn't official. I'm going to add a note on the WP:Airports style section simply stating what is now in place. --] 00:30, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
::::On second thought, I'll wait before making that change. Most major airports don't list cargo operators as of now. I want to hear more opinions before changing the oficial policy. --] 00:36, 20 July 2006 (UTC)


== Dab in destination lists ==
==Article structure==
I've been ] in swapping the article structure. The average Misplaced Pages visitor looking for information on an airport is going to care more about the airlines than the terminal buildings themselves. Therefore, the table of contents should stress the most important feature of the section - which airlines serve the airport where. Then, subordinated under that, of course, each airline is listed in its correct terminal location. ] 07:15, 10 December 2005 (UTC)
*Terminals has been the heading used for quite a while with no one having expressed a problem. In general Airlines are used as a heading when there is no terminal information provided so that usage has been accepted in many articles without a problem. The change you made to the project page just seems to add an extra heading that does not appear to serve any purpose. Also, this is not a list of non-stop flights as your heading suggests. Airport displays list destinations that the flight is going to, which may or may not be non stop flights. The issue of direct vs. non stop has been discussed several times without any clear concensus. ] 07:52, 10 December 2005 (UTC)
**"Airlines and destinations" then? I'm not wedded to non-stop destinations. I just want "Airlines" to be in the table of contents so that users can quickly jump to the destination listings. ] 08:07, 10 December 2005 (UTC)
***The problem is that based on other discussions, charter, private, FBO and cargo terminals are also included. It it not only for commerical service. So terminals appeas to be the most accurate. Would ''Terminals and destinations'' for the larger airports and ''Airlines and destinations'' for the small airports be a solution? ] 21:52, 10 December 2005 (UTC)


There's been a bit of reverting recently on the UK airport articles, in particular for Manchester and Birmingham entries. There seems to be a disagreement on if disambiguation is required, if it should always be done, or...
==Infobox addition==
] has added an extra section to the infobox for ]. The extra section shows the "Number of Passengers" and "Number of Takeoffs". I don't really feel that it does not improve the look. However, because the stats for the movements are ones that I don't feel are correct (see ]) I didn't think it a good idea to remove it. I was wondering what anyone else thought of the box? Also, if the box is to stay then the "Number of Takeoffs" needs to be renamed to "Aircraft Movements". ] ] 00:20, 13 December 2005 (UTC)
*If kept, it should be 'Aircraft movements' since that is the more common term. I don't have a problem with including that data. However I do have a problem with adding more information that needs to be updated every year to every airport. For the larger airports this data could be important, but for a small airport does it matter? Maybe the direction should be to add this to the template and only display the headings if data is provided for the fields. I should add that if this information is added, there should be information on where to get the data used so that all airports are listed based on the same criteria. ] 00:52, 13 December 2005 (UTC)
::For Canadian airports the is the government publication. However, it does contain at least one error. The problem with using the data as provided by the airport authority is I feel it may be inflated. ] ] 01:33, 13 December 2005 (UTC)


Personally I feel that that entries should be "bare" and without disambiguation if it's plainly clear the airport intended - for example from a regional UK airport it's clear these refer to the UK airports, not the US ones. Additionally for the likes of LHR where there could maybe be a service to the US cities (but there's not) the UK ones should be left bare and dismbiguation tagged onto the US entries. Reverse this for US artport destination lists...
==Featured article review==
Please note that feature article ] is open for review at ]. Please consider reviewing the article and help resolving its issues. --] 02:05, 15 December 2005 (UTC)


What does everyone else think? /] 14:37, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
== merge of ] and ] ==
*My opinion is that an airport should be listed the same in each article's destination list. This is part of what an encylopedia does as a part of its style sheet. We maintain a common look and feel across all articles. ] 18:47, 20 July 2006 (UTC)

There's a discussion going on at ] about which article the merge should terminate at. I feel traffic pattern should be the destination, but I'd like to gather opinions and get some consensus on this before we continue. ] ] 00:02, 19 December 2005 (UTC)

== Offsetting in airline lists ==

What's the justification for this layout?

* ]
** ] (New York LaGuardia)
* ]
** ] operated by ] (Cincinnati)
* ]
** ] operated by ] (Philadelphia)

I have yet to see an article where the "zig-zag" structure clarifies anything. At small airports, you get the effect above, where the mainline carriers are listed even though they don't fly there. At big hubs, it looks even sillier because you end up with a fat block of mainline destinations and a thinner block of regional destinations. IMO, it's just as informative to say:

* ] (New York LaGuardia)
* ] operated by ] (Cincinnati)
* ] operated by ] (Philadelphia)

So why do we offset the regionals? - ] 20:13, 4 January 2006 (UTC)
:Because nobody looks for a sign that says "American Eagle" - they look for one that says "American Airlines." The entire justification for the regionals is that they are intended to be tied as closely to the mainline brand as possible. You can't buy a ticket for "US Airways Express." You can buy a ticket on US Airways. ]

== Accents in airport names ==

Hi, I'm new to Wikiprojects and thought I'd like to participate in the airport project. I have already created ], and I was wondering whether accents should be used in destination lists, for example, is it Zurich or Zürich? ] 20:17, 04 January 2006 (UTC)
*It all depends on what the airport's English name is. The ] are avaialble. ] 21:17, 4 January 2006 (UTC)

== Creating redirect pages ==
Under the heading 'creation of a new airport' on the main project page, should the fourth dot point be changed to read: ''Create redirect articles or disambiguation pages for the ICAO and IATA Codes'' instead of ''Create redirect articles for the ICAO and IATA Codes'' as it currently reads? I thought I'd best put a note up here first before diving in and changing it. -- ] 11:25, 8 January 2006 (UTC)
*How about ''Create redirect articles or disambiguation pages as appropiate for the ICAO and IATA Codes''? ] 06:08, 9 January 2006 (UTC)
:: Even better! -- ]|] 06:12, 9 January 2006 (UTC)

==Destination Lists as separate section==
I've noticed that in a few articles users have been creating a separate section with a list of nonstop destinations from a given airport (such as ]). This is in addition to the list of airlines and destinations and seems totally redundant to me, and if nothing else it makes the articles really long. Since I haven't seen anything about it on the project pages, I assume it isn't part of this. Also, ] has its own separate page for this list, which I listed for deletion. Anyone have any comments? ] 13:43, 20 January 2006 (UTC)
*Listing destinations in that way seems to be part of a travel guide. It seems to say we have direct service from all of these locations. If they want that information go to wikitravel. I suspect that it is not on the project page becuause no one thought it was necessary. The project pages are in some ways driven like laws. You assume that you can get by with next to no content. Then as editors push the limits you have to decide what restrictions you need to add. If you wanted to add something about not adding additional types of destination information then give it a try. ] 19:15, 20 January 2006 (UTC)
**I think it's pretty useless if only because it's basically redundant. We don't need to cross-reference everything. It's clear enough to say who flies to where. ] 00:21, 21 January 2006 (UTC)

== Articles for the Misplaced Pages 1.0 project ==

Hi, I'm a member of the ], which is looking to identify quality articles in Misplaced Pages for future publication on CD or paper. We recently began assessing using ], and we are looking for A-class, B-class, and ], with no POV or copyright problems. Can you recommend any suitable articles? Please post your suggestions here. Thanks a lot! ] <sup>]</sup> 17:40, 2 February 2006 (UTC)

== Airports not included ==

It is my understanding that this project covers all airports since we are working to improve the quality of all articles that are airport related. I have removed that change and broght the discussion over here. The airport that one editor listed as not a part of this project was ]. I don't see how removing one airport from the project can improve quality of the encylopedia as a whole. I strongly feel if we are going to support an action like that, then we will be creating a large problem. In any case, doing something like that requires a discussion here since it is a major change to the project. It is not a minor change in my mind. It seems to be an effort to avoid the consensus process. ] 19:30, 5 February 2006 (UTC)
:Well, I guess this is really a continuation of ] above... I think this is an all or nothing affair, and the guidelines of this project would improve any/all airport articles.
:Personally I think we need to knock the ] article into shape, but i'm not sure I've got the stomach for it... T/] 19:39, 5 February 2006 (UTC)
::From reading some comments, it looks like any changes to the article to help make it more conforming are removed by a group of editors. This affects two projects since the same is true for the airline. So it looks like the options are:
::#Ignore the articles.
::#Be involved in a revert war
::#Protect the article
::#Move most of the material to a travel wiki
::#Turn it over to the cleanup crew
::If I was to choose I probably go with the protect, tag for cleanup and ask the cleanup project to do the work. While I may not agree with everything they do, in this case their help might be useful for many reasons. ] 19:56, 5 February 2006 (UTC)

::Vegas, I'm sorry if I made a major change. Thanks for pointing it out. However, as I personally experienced, efforts in trying to standardize the SIN article is countered by reversions of a few SGpedians. They have taken it to their own hands that they do not want to standardize the article, so as to conform to the Wikiprojects template. So, I thought that in order to spare future newbies (such as me) from using their energy against these people, I excluded the SIN article, and together, the SQ articles, from the corresponding projects. If you got a better idea, I'm listening. ] 21:01, 5 February 2006 (UTC)
:::Well there are three options listed above. If you have others to suggest we are listening. On wiki, problems and issues are suppose to be handled by gathering consensus. We also are suppose to be guided by the policies and guidelines. That's why I brought the discussion here so that we can work towards generating some consensus. Remember that there is a difference between this encylopedia wiki and the travel wiki. I suspect that much of what those editors want to include would be welcome in a travel wiki (ah, a 4th option). ] 22:11, 5 February 2006 (UTC)
::::Personally, I'd prefer to protect the article, only if I knew how. And ideally, I'd want someone to arbitrate on the decision. After all, what's wrong with standardization? ] 22:15, 5 February 2006 (UTC)
:::::I would definitely not support protecting the article, as that would be against Misplaced Pages's protection policies. Protection isn't used to enforce a side in an edit war. What I would be in favor of doing is just en masse descending upon the article and making the changes we feel are best for the article. Strength in numbers and consensus. ] 04:25, 6 February 2006 (UTC)
::::::Well at http://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=Singapore_Changi_Airport&oldid=28894679 there's a list of the destinations in the std format - should save someone a bit of work on trawling through the nasty table format it's currently in. Obviously it needs to be updated, but I think this'll be less work than reconverting the entire list! Thanks/] 10:02, 6 February 2006 (UTC)
::::Added a fifth option above, let the cleanup crew handle it. ] 19:27, 6 February 2006 (UTC)
:So, I see ] (wonder who that is) has started reverting and adding back in the codeshares... thanks/] 10:33, 6 February 2006 (UTC)
::Since Changi is not part of the project, I don't see why we need to standardise it. --]]</font>]] (]) 10:44, 6 February 2006 (UTC)
:::I admit that my edit summary on the talk page was misleading, so I added a clarification. I did not mean that the article <i>shouldn't</i> be part of the WikiProject; the idea is that all airport articles are. I removed the project tag because the page is far from representative of the work of this project and I do not want new users thinking that the SIN article uses the standard format that other pages should follow. If we can fix the article, then the tag should be restored. ] 13:20, 6 February 2006 (UTC)
::::Perhaps we could use "Airport articles not yet standardized" to emphasize that we do intend to include it in the project, but it's not done yet. ] 19:40, 7 February 2006 (UTC)

:::I think we should decide whether we would include it in the project or not. Obviously, the SGpedians do not want to include it, since they have their own way of writing the article, which is significantly different from the guidelines of the project. If we do decide to include it, then implementation is the next task. If we edit it, it would only take a matter of hours, if not minutes, for one of the SGpedians to revert it in their own preferred style. If there are any suggestions regarding this... ] 19:52, 7 February 2006 (UTC)

::::I have avoided commenting in these pages since I considered myself a non-participant (or rather, as I was on strike), but I think I have had enough with comments such as the one above. It sickens me knowing there are individuals who choose the easy way out, prefering to either exclude or include by force, instead of sitting down to discuss why opposing views exists. The continued labelling of "SGpedians" in such a way is what I see as galvanising otherwise nuetral editors to take this as a war against a particular group of people being portrayed negatively as partisans, rebels, or renegades. Pardon my language, but since when did wikipedia become a nursery playground?--] 20:22, 7 February 2006 (UTC)

:::I do not understand you. First, you suggested to remove the relevant articles of SIN and SQ from the relevant projects (Let me remind you of your comment when you reverted the SQ destinations article February 5, 2006 8:08). Now you are sickened that there are people "prefering to either exclude or include by force". Make up your mind. I also do not use "SGpedians" as a label for "galvanising otherwise nuetral (sic) editors". I only use that term for practical reasons. Or maybe you'd like me to name all of you who always reverts edits in the relevant articles if the edits do not suit your tastes? Namely ], ], and ]? Besides, one of you actually used that in referring to you collectively back in 2005. One more thing, why should you get the impression that this term treats you as rebels or renegades, when all three of you are not listed as participants (at least as of this hour) in the first place? ] 00:53, 8 February 2006 (UTC)

==PCN==
I miss ] - could somebody please initiate this article? ] 19:31, 7 February 2006 (UTC)
:Done. Now you have to create ]. Cheers. ] ] 21:56, 7 February 2006 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 14:03, 1 October 2024

This is an archive of past discussions on Misplaced Pages:WikiProject Airports. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page.
Archive 1Archive 2Archive 3Archive 4Archive 5Archive 10

Offsetting in airline lists

What's the justification for this layout?

I have yet to see an article where the "zig-zag" structure clarifies anything. At small airports, you get the effect above, where the mainline carriers are listed even though they don't fly there. At big hubs, it looks even sillier because you end up with a fat block of mainline destinations and a thinner block of regional destinations. IMO, it's just as informative to say:

So why do we offset the regionals? - Sekicho 20:13, 4 January 2006 (UTC)

Because nobody looks for a sign that says "American Eagle" - they look for one that says "American Airlines." The entire justification for the regionals is that they are intended to be tied as closely to the mainline brand as possible. You can't buy a ticket for "US Airways Express." You can buy a ticket on US Airways. FCYTravis

Accents in airport names

Hi, I'm new to Wikiprojects and thought I'd like to participate in the airport project. I have already created Valencia Airport, and I was wondering whether accents should be used in destination lists, for example, is it Zurich or Zürich? Callumm 20:17, 04 January 2006 (UTC)

Creating redirect pages

Under the heading 'creation of a new airport' on the main project page, should the fourth dot point be changed to read: Create redirect articles or disambiguation pages for the ICAO and IATA Codes instead of Create redirect articles for the ICAO and IATA Codes as it currently reads? I thought I'd best put a note up here first before diving in and changing it. -- Adz 11:25, 8 January 2006 (UTC)

Even better! -- Adz|talk 06:12, 9 January 2006 (UTC)

Articles for the Misplaced Pages 1.0 project

Hi, I'm a member of the Misplaced Pages:Version_1.0_Editorial_Team, which is looking to identify quality articles in Misplaced Pages for future publication on CD or paper. We recently began assessing using these criteria, and we are looking for A-class, B-class, and Good articles, with no POV or copyright problems. Can you recommend any suitable articles? Please post your suggestions here. Thanks a lot! Gflores 17:40, 2 February 2006 (UTC)

Airports not included

It is my understanding that this project covers all airports since we are working to improve the quality of all articles that are airport related. I have removed that change and broght the discussion over here. The airport that one editor listed as not a part of this project was Singapore Changi Airport. I don't see how removing one airport from the project can improve quality of the encylopedia as a whole. I strongly feel if we are going to support an action like that, then we will be creating a large problem. In any case, doing something like that requires a discussion here since it is a major change to the project. It is not a minor change in my mind. It seems to be an effort to avoid the consensus process. Vegaswikian 19:30, 5 February 2006 (UTC)

Well, I guess this is really a continuation of Misplaced Pages talk:WikiProject Airports#Standardisation - Singapore Changi Airport above... I think this is an all or nothing affair, and the guidelines of this project would improve any/all airport articles.
Personally I think we need to knock the Singapore Changi Airport article into shape, but i'm not sure I've got the stomach for it... T/wangi 19:39, 5 February 2006 (UTC)
From reading some comments, it looks like any changes to the article to help make it more conforming are removed by a group of editors. This affects two projects since the same is true for the airline. So it looks like the options are:
  1. Ignore the articles.
  2. Be involved in a revert war
  3. Protect the article
  4. Move most of the material to a travel wiki
  5. Turn it over to the cleanup crew
If I was to choose I probably go with the protect, tag for cleanup and ask the cleanup project to do the work. While I may not agree with everything they do, in this case their help might be useful for many reasons. Vegaswikian 19:56, 5 February 2006 (UTC)
Vegas, I'm sorry if I made a major change. Thanks for pointing it out. However, as I personally experienced, efforts in trying to standardize the SIN article is countered by reversions of a few SGpedians. They have taken it to their own hands that they do not want to standardize the article, so as to conform to the Wikiprojects template. So, I thought that in order to spare future newbies (such as me) from using their energy against these people, I excluded the SIN article, and together, the SQ articles, from the corresponding projects. If you got a better idea, I'm listening. Elektrik Blue 82 21:01, 5 February 2006 (UTC)
Well there are three options listed above. If you have others to suggest we are listening. On wiki, problems and issues are suppose to be handled by gathering consensus. We also are suppose to be guided by the policies and guidelines. That's why I brought the discussion here so that we can work towards generating some consensus. Remember that there is a difference between this encylopedia wiki and the travel wiki. I suspect that much of what those editors want to include would be welcome in a travel wiki (ah, a 4th option). Vegaswikian 22:11, 5 February 2006 (UTC)
Personally, I'd prefer to protect the article, only if I knew how. And ideally, I'd want someone to arbitrate on the decision. After all, what's wrong with standardization? Elektrik Blue 82 22:15, 5 February 2006 (UTC)
I would definitely not support protecting the article, as that would be against Misplaced Pages's protection policies. Protection isn't used to enforce a side in an edit war. What I would be in favor of doing is just en masse descending upon the article and making the changes we feel are best for the article. Strength in numbers and consensus. FCYTravis 04:25, 6 February 2006 (UTC)
Well at http://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=Singapore_Changi_Airport&oldid=28894679 there's a list of the destinations in the std format - should save someone a bit of work on trawling through the nasty table format it's currently in. Obviously it needs to be updated, but I think this'll be less work than reconverting the entire list! Thanks/wangi 10:02, 6 February 2006 (UTC)
Added a fifth option above, let the cleanup crew handle it. Vegaswikian 19:27, 6 February 2006 (UTC)
So, I see User:69.234.78.52 (wonder who that is) has started reverting and adding back in the codeshares... thanks/wangi 10:33, 6 February 2006 (UTC)
Since Changi is not part of the project, I don't see why we need to standardise it. --Terence Ong (恭喜发财) 10:44, 6 February 2006 (UTC)
I admit that my edit summary on the talk page was misleading, so I added a clarification. I did not mean that the article shouldn't be part of the WikiProject; the idea is that all airport articles are. I removed the project tag because the page is far from representative of the work of this project and I do not want new users thinking that the SIN article uses the standard format that other pages should follow. If we can fix the article, then the tag should be restored. Dbinder 13:20, 6 February 2006 (UTC)
Perhaps we could use "Airport articles not yet standardized" to emphasize that we do intend to include it in the project, but it's not done yet. MCB 19:40, 7 February 2006 (UTC)
I think we should decide whether we would include it in the project or not. Obviously, the SGpedians do not want to include it, since they have their own way of writing the article, which is significantly different from the guidelines of the project. If we do decide to include it, then implementation is the next task. If we edit it, it would only take a matter of hours, if not minutes, for one of the SGpedians to revert it in their own preferred style. If there are any suggestions regarding this... Elektrik Blue 82 19:52, 7 February 2006 (UTC)
I have avoided commenting in these pages since I considered myself a non-participant (or rather, as I was on strike), but I think I have had enough with comments such as the one above. It sickens me knowing there are individuals who choose the easy way out, prefering to either exclude or include by force, instead of sitting down to discuss why opposing views exists. The continued labelling of "SGpedians" in such a way is what I see as galvanising otherwise nuetral editors to take this as a war against a particular group of people being portrayed negatively as partisans, rebels, or renegades. Pardon my language, but since when did wikipedia become a nursery playground?--Huaiwei 20:22, 7 February 2006 (UTC)
I do not understand you. First, you suggested to remove the relevant articles of SIN and SQ from the relevant projects (Let me remind you of your comment when you reverted the SQ destinations article February 5, 2006 8:08). Now you are sickened that there are people "prefering to either exclude or include by force". Make up your mind. I also do not use "SGpedians" as a label for "galvanising otherwise nuetral (sic) editors". I only use that term for practical reasons. Or maybe you'd like me to name all of you who always reverts edits in the relevant articles if the edits do not suit your tastes? Namely Vsion, Terenceong1992, and Huaiwei? Besides, one of you actually used that in referring to you collectively back in 2005. One more thing, why should you get the impression that this term treats you as rebels or renegades, when all three of you are not listed as participants (at least as of this hour) in the first place? Elektrik Blue 82 00:53, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
I do not quite understand you or your antics either. Firstly, may it go down in the records, that the idea of excluding articles from wikiproject have never crossed my mind as even a possibility, until I noticed Dbinder removing the wikproject tag from both the Singapore Changi Airport and Singapore Airlines articles. Interesting, for it makes me wonder if this action is sending a message of "you wont follow my lead? Then I shall disown you". And to further enforce this message, you added a section known as "Airports that are not part of the project", an amusing step leaving me to wonder if that reflects your self-censorship from the articles in question, or simply a refusal to discuss and negotiate.
So fine. If that is the kind of immature stand some of you are going to take, then please, be my guest. Feel free to extend the same condition on all articles you have a problem with, and that includes the one on SIA destinations, hence my statement "Then exclude this article from the wikiproject as has been done for Singapore Changi Airport", if you want to use this wikiproject as a basis for revert warring, a behavior which is far more damaging to wikipedia on the whole. So a mere suggestion on my part based on the behavior of yourself and Dbinder is reflective of me wanting out? Of my wanting to label ourselves as renegades? Hardly. You excluded us before I even "asked" for it, so in what way is my comment contradictory?
As for the term SGpedians, it was, for your information, a term we coined to refer to ourselves. Nothing inflammatory about it at all as a label for Sg-related individuals. Instead, I take obvious issue with your sweeping statement claiming "the SGpedians do not want to include it". For your information, the people who have ever opposed any of these so-called "standardisation" efforts dont just come from the SGpedian community alone, and neither are all SGpedians sharing like-minded opinions. If you have to list the three individuals, then yes that is precisely what you should be doing, without insulting an entire community with such degrading comments. Practical reasons my foot. Your utilisation of the label reflects strongly on your believe that certain individuals from a certain locality are ganging up to promote POV in an article related to that locality, and it clearly shows in the way you attempt to "remove" this POV.
Last but not least, do share your thoughts on how non-participants in this wikiproject cannot be labelled as "rebels or renegades"? I would certainly like to get some insights into how your grey matter works before commenting.--Huaiwei 07:35, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
Guys, can we just edit up a version of the SIN article as we'd want it at a sub-page then then turn it over to other parties (cleanup crew, RfC, whatever)? wangi 08:51, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
I dont quite get you. You are encouraging article-forking in place of discussions?--Huaiwei 08:56, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
Who's forking an article? An article on a sub (talk) page is a good way to get a complete revision in place for discussion and comparison, without constant reverts. Very little of the discussion above is about the task at hand... Thanks/wangi 09:27, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
As it stands, the existing article is not reflective of anyone's ideals, so what kind of comparison are you refering to? And if that is not forking an article, what is?--Huaiwei 09:33, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
It's not forking because it's not a real article in the encyclopedia namespace and it will have no inward links from other articles. All it is is a tool to aid discussion. If the current article does not meet your ideals then point to a past revision that does, or feel free to demonstrate how you feel it should be (on another sub page). T/wangi 09:43, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
There has been numerous debates over the virtues of creating "unreal articles", for many a times, they have been used to validate a version over another, no different for forking an article, obviously. The article does not, and have never been a demonstration of my full intentions. And to ask me to utilise the same article-forking method I just criticised to justify my version is some kind of a mockery to me.--Huaiwei 10:09, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
I am trying to work with you here, I'm trying to be constructive, and I'm trying to focus on the problem rather than expanding it and argumenting for arguments sake. One of the intended uses of sub-pages is for drafts of major article revisions. wangi 10:40, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
Considering unending debates over the utilisation of sub-pages, which is clearly evident even in the guideline article you quote above, I would personally prefer a more productive means of hammering out a deal which all are amicable to. Unless you are telling me you have a wealth of information now which you are clamouring to add, instead of this merely being a formatting/presentation dispute, then would not a reference to any article here which "conforms" to your existing "standards" to demonstrate your intentions be just as effective?--Huaiwei 12:08, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
<<bashes head against wall>> /wangi 12:55, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
Huaiwei, if you don't want the articles to be standardized, per the Wikiproject guidelines, then why are you making such a big fuzz about whether the articles should be included or not? If you want to include it, then subject it to standardization. If you don't want it to subject to standardization, then don't include it. Simple as that. It is simple modus tollens, Huaiwei. And regarding your suggestion to exclude the articles, isn't that what the English sentence conveys as its meaning? If you have other meanings in mind, make it clear. As far as the sentence is concerned, you wanted the articles out of the project.
And regarding my use of the term "SGpedians", I do not use it to make a sweeping statement, as you claim. Notice that in two out of three occasions, I qualify my statements, such as "a few SGpedians" and "one of the SGpedians". This translates as "There is a set of SGpedians, and within that set, there is an entity or entities" to which I am referring of. Notice I never used a universal quantifier. Semantics, Huaiwei, semantics.
Regarding rebels and renegades, it is just the same as military deserters. You cannot be a deserter unless you are part of the unit. Elektrik Blue 82 11:35, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
You appear to be tripping over yourselves in trying to force me into pre-conceived moulds of who you think I am and what I want here. Yes, I "don't want the articles to be standardized", based on some of the existing Wikiproject guidelines. So the obvious solution is to discuss the relevant guidelines, and not to start removing articles the way you have done. Your modus operandi appears to be highly flawed, and setting an unhealthy precedent in wikipedia's efforts to promote community-based efforts. Your "you are with me, or you are not with me" mentality may be "simple" in your books, but are woefully simplistic, immature and inappriopriate in mine.
So by your books, you took my sentence in one article to mean I "wanted the articles out of the project". At the same time, you expect others to understand "semantics", to take context into consideration, and to qualify your statements for you. Hypocrisy knows no bounds I suppose? ;)
And the "unit" we talk about here is the wikipedian community, not this wikiproject. Aviation-related articles are not in the sole domain of this project's participants, and are not subject solely to their contributions. Every single wikipedian is fully entitled to edit them, to agree or disagree with project guidlines, and to comment, suggest and debate on them. Shocking, indeed, that for one lambasting others for "taking ownership" of articles, he appears to be just as gulty of demonstrating the exact same fault?--Huaiwei 11:58, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
Funny, if my mentality is "woefully simplistic, immature and inappriopriate", then how come you spend time answering it? I was getting the impression that you don't deal with "nursery playground" people?
Oh well, I tried to be logical, but obviously, it still doesn't work. I won't deal with illogical people from now on. Elektrik Blue 82 12:12, 8 February 2006 (UTC)
Answering what? ;) If you think I dont deal with "nursery playground" people, you gotta be quite mistaken. As you probably know, it is often greatly critical for parents or teachers to keep a watchful eye over their charges as they roll around in the playground, before disaster strikes.
I suppose logic hurts, especially when it turns out that you arent much better than the folks you are choosing to nit-pick on.--Huaiwei 12:23, 8 February 2006 (UTC)

Well, if anyone is going to clean this article up, now would be a good time. Huaiwei has just been blocked for 2 weeks. McNeight 16:54, 8 February 2006 (UTC)

PCN

I miss Pavement Classification Number - could somebody please initiate this article? Scriberius 19:31, 7 February 2006 (UTC)

Done. Now you have to create Aircraft Classification Number. Cheers. CambridgeBayWeather (Talk) 21:56, 7 February 2006 (UTC)

Redvers Airport

I need some suggestions as to what to do with this airport. As of the new CFS (Feb 16) the airport is listed as abandoned, so do I

  1. Delete the stub and the ICAO code link.
  2. Turn it into something like Killaloe/Bonnechere Airport and create a new category Category:Historical airports in Saskatchewan.
  3. Some other idea

Right now I am leaning towards 2 but I'm open to ideas. CambridgeBayWeather (Talk) 06:09, 11 February 2006 (UTC)

  • I think 2 is the only choice. Basically if an airport closes, new material would not be added. It stays as a document of the no longer active airport. More information can be added if someone finds some, but other then that, few updates would be expected. Vegaswikian 06:27, 11 February 2006 (UTC)

Category:Airports in the Mojave Desert

This category just appeared. Any opinions on it? Vegaswikian 08:43, 26 February 2006 (UTC)

it seems a little odd I would have thought List of airports in the Mojave Desert would have been a better idea. CambridgeBayWeather (Talk) 14:45, 26 February 2006 (UTC)
I'd go with the list. Dbinder 16:09, 26 February 2006 (UTC)

Why not Wikilink the destinations?

This policy seems a little odd to me - it's usual Misplaced Pages policy to Wikilink any mention of a city in other articles, and the destinations served by an airport are not necessarily mentioned elsewhere in the article. What's the rationale behind not Wikilinking them? — SteveRwanda 10:00, 6 March 2006 (UTC)

I agree with the policy as is. The number of links would be excessive and clutter up the page. Also, it would make editing more cumbersome, since every single link would have to be in the form ]. Dbinder 16:03, 6 March 2006 (UTC)
Not only that, but looking at airport articles that do wikilink, it becomes confusing at times, especially where there are two airlines that have many destinations listed right next to each other. You can't tell where one begins and the other ends. -- SmthManly / / 05:09, 2 April 2006 (UTC)

Non-Airport Disambiguation

KABQ is also an Albuquerque radio station call sign. I don't know how to set up a disambiguation page.

Select the name on the redirected from line. Then edit the redirect article to a dab. I did this for KABQ. Note that the radio station article needs to be disambiguated as KABQ (AM). Vegaswikian 23:53, 7 March 2006 (UTC)

Aruba or Oranjestad?

Hello all. What seems to be the consensus on this? I tried to search around but found nothing. Personally, I prefer Aruba over Oranjestad, Mauritius over Mahebourg, basically, island over city-within-island, simply because the island is more identifiable than the city. Any thoughts on this? Elektrik Blue 82 00:38, 24 March 2006 (UTC)

Why don't do we do Oranjestad (Aruba). Actually, I don't really see the point to putting the destinations within brackets, other than making it look neater. -- SmthManly / / 01:21, 24 March 2006 (UTC)

Newcastle airport coordinates wrong

While browsing Misplaced Pages with Google Earth, I noticed that the coordinates of Newcastle Airport are very far off. I don't know the correct ones, so I haven't fixed it. AxelBoldt 01:14, 2 April 2006 (UTC)

Hmmm. I didn't use the .kmz file from the web site you linked, but I'm looking at the article in one window and Google Earth in another, and the coordinates appear correct to me. MCB 04:15, 2 April 2006 (UTC)
Click on the coordinate link in the article, then on "mapquest". You'll get a beautiful red star in the middle of the North Sea. AxelBoldt 00:19, 3 April 2006 (UTC)
That's because the coordinates said East when it should be West. Try it now. CambridgeBayWeather (Talk) 03:49, 3 April 2006 (UTC)
Yup, works beautifully. Thanks! AxelBoldt 05:04, 3 April 2006 (UTC)
Ooops! I very carefully checked the digits in each field against each other, but must have missed the E/W part! Sorry about that. MCB 05:34, 4 April 2006 (UTC)

Disambiguation of cities with multiple airports

This wasn't fully resolved the last time it was brought up... so what is the actual policy? The airport page says that (London-Heathrow) or (London Heathrow) with or without dashes is fine, yet pages have been reverted for changing it. Not to mention, it is different from article to article as it stands.

The slash marks should be eliminated as an option because they are used with an airport serving two cities (ala Seattle/Tacoma). Dashes are also used in conjunction with city-city pairings, and they just look ugly in general. There shouldn't be any problem with using the city and the airport name after (like how it would be spoken); but, using the IATA code looks the cleanest. It also takes up less space and makes the list more streamlined. And, it is the most practical for use in conjunction with travel websites, etc. (Usually a person only puts in the IATA code or city name, not the name of the airport...)

So, what does everyone else think (and maybe something concrete can be decided)?

Which is best?

(Buenos Aires EZE, London LHR, New York JFK, Paris ORY)

(Buenos Aires Ezeiza, London Heathrow, New York JFK, Paris Orly)

(Buenos Aires-Ezeiza, London-Heathrow, New York-JFK, Paris-Orly)

(Buenos Aires/Ezeiza, London/Heathrow, New York/JFK, Paris/Orly)

I think I agree that a space is best. However, I'm not sure whether codes or names would be better. On the one hand, I think I would like to see "Paris Orly" and "Paris CDG". "Paris ORY" seems a little strange to me (especially to save one letter), but "Paris Charles de Gaulle" is too long for my tastes. If I had to pick though, I guess I'd take codes over long names. Rdore 18:43, 14 April 2006 (UTC)
I prefer the space and the actual name (i.e., the second alternative above, London Heathrow, etc.). Codes are fine for us airline/airport people who have them all memorized :-), but the vast number of readers of Misplaced Pages do not. Nevertheless, there should be exceptions to this rule: "New York JFK" is much better than "New York John F. Kennedy". Dunno which side CDG falls on. But I strongly believe both the hyphen and the slash are a bad idea. MCB 19:12, 14 April 2006 (UTC)
I'd go with the hyphen, except in the case where the airport's actual name includes the city name (e.g. London Heathrow). So it should be Chicago-O'Hare, New York-JFK, London Heathrow, etc. This will also serve to clarify in the article if the city name is part of the airport name. Dbinder 20:06, 14 April 2006 (UTC)
I would pick the third option, even in the case of LHR and LGW. I think the first component should be the city name, and the second component would be the distinguishing element for the airport, regardless if the official name includes the city name or not. I'd rather base it on common usage, which implies that I prefer (New York-JFK) and (Paris-Charles de Gaulle) over (New York-John F Kennedy) and (Paris-CDG) simply because people refer to these airports as "JFK" and "Charles de Gaulle" more than the other option. I believe the same goes for LHR, people refer to it as "Heathrow" than "London Heathrow". But then, that's just my 0.02 USD. Elektrik Blue 82 20:54, 14 April 2006 (UTC)
I strongly prefer the hyphen, as a mere space does not adequately help readers determine where the city name ends and the airport name begins. Is it York Kennedy Airport in New City? Something is needed to visually differentiate the two different name structures being used within the same clause. FCYTravis 12:55, 21 April 2006 (UTC)
While no one refers to New York's airport as John F. Kennedy, I've heard equal numbers say "JFK" as "Kennedy". The two terms are interchangeable, so JFK is not the "standard". Either should be acceptable. Dbinder 16:45, 21 April 2006 (UTC)
We ought to settle on one or the other. Everything else on every other article is JFK. If we want to switch everything to Kennedy, that's cool, I have no objection to it - but it looks ugly to have things one way on some articles and a different way on others. This is about standardization, after all. FCYTravis 17:48, 21 April 2006 (UTC)
Airports are not being spelled out in all cases. While LaGuardia is being spelled out, Kennedy is not (JFK being used). Similar airports are being spelled out. We use O'Hare, Midway; Love; Hobby, Intercontinental; Dulles, National/Reagan; Heathrow, Gatwick; Orly, Charles de Gaulle; Narita, Haneda; etc. From an editorial perspective, codes should never be used, especially since they are meaningless when composed in sentence form. This is also preferred style according to the two major manuals of style used by editors, Chicago Manual of Style and Gregg Reference Manual. Codes should only be used with space constraints, such as in tables.
I think you make a fine argument, and it's my opinion that we should standardize on Kennedy. Any objections? FCYTravis 17:48, 21 April 2006 (UTC)
I think it should be New York-JFK and not Kennedy because more people say and use "JFK instead of "Kennedy". 71.12.193.242 02:31, 22 June 2006 (UTC)
More people also say DFW, not Dallas/Fort Worth; Cincinnati, not Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky; Raleigh, not Raleigh/Durham; Baltimore, not Baltimore/Washington; and Minneapolis, not Minneapolis/St. Paul. 70.123.197.99 04:50, 22 June 2006 (UTC)
DFW, CVG, RDU, BWI and MSP are airports that serve two major cities. This is different from JFK, where it is one airport of a city having multiple airports. Elektrik Blue 82 05:57, 22 June 2006 (UTC)

Charters

Should the destinations of charter airlines be listed in the airport articles? Take Manchester International Airport for example. There are separate listings for the terminals, and there are notations whether the destinations are scheduled or charter. I personally think this is just plain messy. Besides, charters do not have permanent routes, that's why they aren't scheduled. Then if that is the case, then why list their destinations? Would it be preferrable if we just list the charter airlines that operate out of a certain airport on a separate subheading, without the cities listed, regardless on (in MAN's case) whether they operate from T1 or T2? Elektrik Blue 82 00:32, 16 April 2006 (UTC)

St. John's International Airport

Could you look at that article. I don't think that it is improved by having all those images down the side. I could see having the St. John's logo but all the airline logos distract. What does anyone else feel? CambridgeBayWeather (Talk) 15:04, 1 May 2006 (UTC)

They look terrible, and there's no reason for them to be there. Dbinder 15:28, 1 May 2006 (UTC)
It's also an inappropriate use of fair-use images - the logos. We cannot argue fair use, so they should go... /wangi 15:36, 1 May 2006 (UTC)
Thanks. CambridgeBayWeather (Talk) 23:09, 1 May 2006 (UTC)

Codeshares

I know that in WikiProject Airlines, it says that codeshares should not be listed for the secondary carrier. And I am following that. However, one editor insists on putting codeshares on the page for Kansai International Airport. I am currently in a content dispute with him, me being against the inclusion of codeshares, and he being for it. Could someone act as a third party to this? Elektrik Blue 82 02:03, 8 May 2006 (UTC)

I agree with your approach and have tentatively added the following to the policy:
Do not list secondary carriers for code share flights. For example, if Air New Zealand operates a domestic flight under its own flight number and an additional Singapore Airlines codeshare, the codeshare can be noted for the Air NZ flight but this should not be listed as a Singapore Airlines flight.
Actually, the code shares should only be listed as a general comment on the airlines' article. I thought we had reached agreement on this a while ago. The decision was that the destinations should only list destinations for the carrier that flys the airplane on the route. Vegaswikian 04:37, 8 May 2006 (UTC)
That's what I thought as well. I believe it is not necessary to list the codeshare info even for the primary carrier. As Vegaswikian said, destinations should only list the cities in which the metal of the actual airline flies to. Elektrik Blue 82 11:45, 8 May 2006 (UTC)
Hi. The metal of the actual airline flies to? So would you explain DAB convention if your premise were right, Mr "contribute, contribute, contribute!"? Thank you. KGF 13:00, 8 May 2006 (UTC)
Is name-calling really necessary here? I find it ironic that you express thanks after calling me names. Elektrik Blue 82 12:27, 8 May 2006 (UTC)
The rationale is simply that this avoids unnecessary clutter and confusion, as no Singapore Airlines planes will ever fly the route in question, it's just a bit in a reservations database somewhere. Comments welcome. Jpatokal 04:17, 8 May 2006 (UTC)
And the different between a codeshare and an operated-by is that eg. Song flights use Song metal but have only Delta flight numbers. It would be a codeshare if there was a primary Song flight number and a secondary Delta flight number. Jpatokal 04:32, 8 May 2006 (UTC)

Hi. It seems quite similar between a codeshare and an operated-by, even your explanation is inambiguous. Accoring to the part of the sentences, which you deleted just before stating "your" rulles on codeshares:

# US Airways (Destinations)
   * US Airways operated by America West Airlines (Destinations)

it could be understand as the codeshares convention. I believe it would be helpful if there are description about codeshare flights with clarity. Codeshare flights information does not seem to be unnecessary clutter and confusion, rather vital important info at any "airports" If codeshare flights info seemed to be clutter, it would be a matter of expression or structure of conventions. Comments welcome. KGF 19:25, 8 May 2006 (UTC)

Hi. Sorry for overlooking your constructive idea that what I would had in the dispute with Mr.Elektrik blue 82.
* Delta Airlines operated by Korean Air (Seoul-Incheon)
* Korean Air (Busan, Jeju, Seoul-Incheon)
 it would look like this:
* Korean Air (Busan, Jeju, Seoul-Incheon), codeshare for Delta Airlines

It seems to be reasonable. However, it is ambiguous which destination is codeshared or not based on the proposed convention. In addition, codeshared flights are sometimes scheduled from different terminals/wings. Your proposed idea might another confusion instead of clarity. Codeshared information does not seem to be little as you said especially when we check out flights using FFPs, such as OneWorld, StarAlliance, SkyTeam and so on. KGF 20:55, 8 May 2006 (UTC)

But if an airline does not fly the given route (or doesn't even fly to that airport in many cases), then listing it is misleading. First of all, there's the question of which terminal the flight should be listed under - the operating airline or the codesharing airline? Codeshares are for marketing purposes. The only reason US Airways is listed US operated by HP is because the two airlines merged and are in the process of merging their flight operations. America West is no longer listed as a separate airline. Dbinder 09:54, 8 May 2006 (UTC)


Thank you, Mr. Fairness. I understand that codeshares are for marketing purposes. And so what? The point should be whether articles are useful or not. Codeshare flights info will not be misleading if the appropriate convention is installed. The followings are some idea abouts codeshared flights:

(Type 1)

(Type 2)

Hope you are not the guy who oppose anything without an alternative. Welcome comments.KGF 22:50, 8 May 2006 (UTC)

How about:

(Type 3)

i.e. Leave it as it is. Another issue with codeshares is that on short-haul flights (especially US domestic), where 3 or more airlines may have their code on a flight, it would cause airport articles to be pointlessly long. Destination lists in O'Hare and DFW would probably double, since Air China and Star Alliance members codeshare with United on many flights, as do Alaska Airlines and oneworld carriers with American. If an airline doesn't fly to an airport, it shouldn't be listed. Dbinder 12:58, 8 May 2006 (UTC)

I'd vote for (Type 3) per Dbinder's stated reasons. Elektrik Blue 82 13:09, 8 May 2006 (UTC)
Agreed, keep things as-is and do not list codeshares. And I'll up your total... Here at Edinburgh Airport it's not unusual to have six (or more) codeshares on a flight... /wangi 13:09, 8 May 2006 (UTC)
Clearly Type 3, per Dbinder. It would be uselessly duplicative to list every single destination that United flies to from San Francisco under the "US Airways" heading - but just about every United flight from SFO also carries a US code. Also an ANA code, a Thai code... you name it. There is a clear distinction between the "operated by" subsidiary listings and codeshares. Flights listed as "ABC Airways operated by XYZ Airlines" are more-or-less seamlessly marketed and operated as one airline brand image, but operated by a different operating entity for various reasons. United Express flights are branded as United, even though there's about six or seven airlines flying for United Express. Codeshare flights are not branded as the code-placing airline, but are branded as the operating airline. FCYTravis 21:49, 8 May 2006 (UTC)
Based on the support for the current arrangement, I'll modify the project page to reflect this in a few hours. That will allow for objections before any changes. Vegaswikian 23:01, 8 May 2006 (UTC)

Well, thanks to explanation by other wikipedian but Mr. Elektrik blue 82, who just showed his agreement, I got it. It becomes too redundant for major airports in the US and Europe for codeshare listing. However, from passengers views (not nerds views), knowing the fact "ABC Airways operated by XYZ Airlines" seems less meaning than knowing the codeshared flights when you go to airports. Thus, it still supposed to be demands for codeshare flights in the future. Then, I wonder how do WikiProject Airlines wikipedian solve it. KGF 02:55, 9 May 2006 (UTC)

Well Misplaced Pages isn't a travel guide. If someone is confused on who they're actually flying with then the airline isn't doing their job right. In the franchise scenario ("ABC Airways operated by XYZ Airlines") it makes sense to include the additional information on who is actually operating the flight since the flight is operated on their planes, under their AOC and under their insurance etc - that's encyclopedic. /wangi 09:32, 9 May 2006 (UTC)

Over the top tech info

What's your opinion on full airfield details within an article? For example as is the case with Humberside Airport? Thanks/wangi 22:03, 10 May 2006 (UTC)

I don't think it should be included, for several reasons: (1) it's not really encyclopedic information, which is summary in nature, rather than an attempt to be a primary source, and Misplaced Pages is not an instruction manual; (2) the information can be obtained from sites like AirNav, FlightAware, Skyvector, AirportsA-Z, etc., which can be presented in the External links section as direct links; and (3) unlike things like runway headings, which don't change often, the other technical info does change, it is a burden to keep up to date, and pilots should not be relying on Misplaced Pages for critical technical information such as frequencies, magnetic deviation, etc. MCB 22:47, 10 May 2006 (UTC)
I agree. This is information that is not of general interest. For those that have an interest, there are better sources that they should be using and probably know about. If it is a concern that the links need to be available, then maybe they can be added to the information templates that are used to generate the links. Vegaswikian 23:01, 10 May 2006 (UTC)

Tri-Cities Airport vs. Tri-Cities Airport

The Greater Binghamton Airport article refers to the "Tri-Cities Airport" but unwittingly refers to the Tri-Cities Airport KPSC in Pasco, Washington State as opposed to the "correct" Tri-Cities Airport KCZG in Endicott, New York State. What is the procedure for creating a new page for the Tri-Cities Airport in Endicott? Besides the GBA page having an incorrect link, so does the List_of_airports_by_ICAO_code:_K

  • OK, I think this is cleared up now. If you look at Tri-Cities Airport, it is now a dab that should clear this up. For the record, I found three airports using that name. I cleaned up several articles, and I think things are straight now. To create the article, just click on the red link. Vegaswikian 02:51, 14 May 2006 (UTC)

Essential air service

I was starting to add a reference to essential air service to those airports covered by this program but stopped when I thought a category might be better for this. Comments? Vegaswikian 16:31, 19 May 2006 (UTC)

  • I think it's probably good both as a category and a brief mention within the article - something like, "Commercial service at XYZ is subsidized through the Essential Air Service program." FCYTravis 09:39, 20 May 2006 (UTC)
    • OK, I added the cat and will slowly add the airports. At a later date we can go in and modify the text that should be easy using the cat as a list to work from. Vegaswikian 19:14, 21 May 2006 (UTC)

Grandes-Bergeronnes Airport

Can someone look at this. I have changed it back and asked the editor what the problem with it was. Am I wrong in thinking that the Canada Flight Supplement is a source rather than a see also? I really don't feel like changing 1300+ airports. CambridgeBayWeather (Talk) 01:22, 22 May 2006 (UTC)

Thanks for the reply. The user hase a good point as to why he changed them, see User talk:Jayvdb. If I change the reference to read "Canada Flight Supplement effective day/month/year" for all of them every 56 days will ensure that they are all up to date. CambridgeBayWeather (Talk) 13:48, 22 May 2006 (UTC)
You could always use a template for adding the reference. That way one change and you have updated 1,300 articles. Vegaswikian 22:20, 22 May 2006 (UTC)
Thanks. That's the way to go. CambridgeBayWeather (Talk) 23:28, 22 May 2006 (UTC)

User adding flags to destination lists

User:82.41.21.236 has been adding flags to destination lists, which is a "real bad idea" in my opinion, and goes against the existing format. I've left a commonet on their talk page, but can others help revert the additions please? Thanks/wangi 23:04, 23 May 2006 (UTC)

They are are reverted now. Including the ones that were edited after the anon added the flags. CambridgeBayWeather (Talk) 00:23, 24 May 2006 (UTC)
They aren't all reverted. A lot of pages now have them. Dbinder 09:27, 24 May 2006 (UTC)
Do we need to address this on the project page? While not a policy, most everyone usually respects the guidelines on project pages and following them keeps editors out of trouble. My concern is the number of hits this can add to the image server. Vegaswikian 16:59, 24 May 2006 (UTC)
I thought I got all the ones that 82.41.21.236 did. Which did I miss? CambridgeBayWeather (Talk) 17:14, 24 May 2006 (UTC)
I just looked at Adria Airways destinations and it has flags, that was the first one I checked. LukaP appaears to be the editor that added those. Contrib history shows a lot of destinations were edited. Vegaswikian 18:12, 24 May 2006 (UTC)
Those are done. When I go back to work I'll run through the the airports by category and see what else I can find. Early Saturday morning. CambridgeBayWeather (Talk) 00:00, 25 May 2006 (UTC)
I've gone through 3500+ articles from "Category:Airports in country" and not one has "Flagicon" in it. CambridgeBayWeather (Talk) 22:38, 27 May 2006 (UTC)

Alliances

Do you think it would be a good idea to add small size logos next to airlines at airports to represent which alliance they belong to, to show how they are aligned at the airport? Flymeoutofhere 16:51, 25 May 2006 (UTC)

I don't think that's a good idea for the same reason as the flags. They clutter up the page, and more importantly, put quite a strain on the server. Dbinder 16:53, 25 May 2006 (UTC)

Also might run afoul of fair use. CambridgeBayWeather (Talk) 16:57, 25 May 2006 (UTC)

Citing Through Service

I posted this question on the talk page of BWI and the folks there suggested I ask it here: what is the appropriate way to cite through service? I had added a note about upcoming through service from BWI to Accra, via Banjul -- and that's just how I listed it, with the word "via." Someone removed the "via" and made it look like BWI will soon have non-stop service to both destinations--but the reality is it will be service to Accra, with a stop-over in Banjul. Now, the reason I listed it this way is because that is how it is being promoted, with the expectation that people will buy their tickets primarily for Accra. This is exactly like, say, SAA's flight from IAD to Johanneburg, which stops in Dakar for refueling and a crew change--and while you can buy a ticket for Dakar, most people know it as the flight to Jo'burg.

So should we only list the stop-over point; should we list it as "via," or should we list both destinations separatly (which I find confusing).

I vote for "via," but with the caveat that this should really only be for long-haul International routes. I think the odd domestic flight that has through-service from a hub to another spoke shouldn't be listed. I think it's just the extraordinary nature of these long-haul flights that makes this valuable info.

Thoughts? Free-world 15:22, 31 May 2006 (UTC)

The format right now is to list direct, non-plane-changing, international destinations (without the "via" designation). I think that's been working pretty well. Dbinder (talk) 15:29, 31 May 2006 (UTC)
I agree adding that you only list destinations where passengers can board or leave the flight. Fuel only stops and the like should not be listed. This does not appear to be that type of exception. Also, the flight number should be the same to all stops. Vegaswikian 21:24, 31 May 2006 (UTC)
To extend this, routes on which a carrier cannot legally carry domestic passengers also shouldn't be listed. e.g. United flies LAX-SYD-MEL, but passengers cannot board at Sydney, so in the Sydney Airport article, only LAX (and SFO) should be listed as a destination. Likewise, at Melbourne Airport, LAX should be listed, but not Sydney. The same goes for Qantas between LAX and JFK. Dbinder (talk) 23:14, 31 May 2006 (UTC)
The section is intended to show cities which the airlines serve, NOT the route info. Thus, having a simple comma between Accra and Banjul DOES NOT and SHOULD NOT imply that there are two different non-stop flights. If that were the implication then what would happen to the numerous European airlines that fly the Hub-BKK-SIN route? Their listings do not imply that they have separate non-stop flights for their hubs and for the other Asian city. What the format right now is perfect as is. Elektrik Blue 82 23:02, 31 May 2006 (UTC)
I apologize, but this doesn't seem clear at all--and for the simple fact that the heading of the section is "Airlines and nonstop destinations." That implies that what we read is, in fact, a list of all non-stop flights each airline serves from that airport. (A recent letter to the editor of the Washington Post travel section even suggested using Misplaced Pages to find out JUST THAT INFORMATION, since it's often not readily available on airport websites.) Further, if this is true, then there is a lot of missing information. To wit: a quick check of the current OAG schedule for BWI shows at least three different airlines serving BWI - SEA with direct flights (ie, exactly ONE stop somewhere, but the flight number and equipment are the same, and they clearly have cabotage), yet I don't see Seattle listed as a destination, with or without a comma. If it takes a conversation on the project page to understand that that's what's being communicated (even the talk page of the airport in question didn't know this answer) then how can we claim "the format right now is perfect as is." I think we need to rethink this. Free-world 02:05, 1 June 2006 (UTC)
Well, the structure section on the project page says the heading should be Airlines and destinations if only one terminal or terminal(s) not identified otherwise Terminals and destinations. So nonstop should not be in the heading. I guess your confusion is one reason why it should not be included in the heading. Vegaswikian 02:56, 1 June 2006 (UTC)
Also, on a one-stop direct flight with a plane change, the OAG schedule will only list the first plane used. In order to check if there is indeed a change, you need to check the two individual segments and ensure they are the same. Even then, there is no guarantee; since the 737 and 320 are the most popular domestic planes, it is quite possible for a direct flight to use one 737 from BWI to, say, ORD, and then another one to SEA, all with the same flight #. Dbinder (talk) 13:44, 1 June 2006 (UTC)
OK, then, despite the slight disambuigation of the heading (which could be 100% disambugated by saying, "Airlines and their non-stop and direct destinations") I would argue that we should list only non-stop destinations, period, with the exception of long-haul routes, and then marked with a "via." I think spending the time to determine if a one-stop domestic route between a spoke and another spoke through a hub is indeed the same flight# and equipment is a lot of work, and nowhere near as useful as listing just non-stops--as this information is not always easy to find online, but gives a very good measure of an airport's reach. The one flight a day that just happens to take you without a plane change through a hub is probably more a scheduling fluke, than an idea of either O&D traffic or hub traffic. As I said, the exception I'd propose would be very long-haul international (or maybe even very-long domestic, if it involved, say, flying from Regan National to Anchorage via SEA or somesuch), but then marking it as "via." I think that's an exception worth noting. Deciding which is worth noting this way and which isn't doesn't have to be concrete; it could be left to the contributor to decide, in a "I'll know it when I see it" fashion. Thoughts? Free-world 13:57, 1 June 2006 (UTC)
Exceptions make it difficult to keep things clear. It is simple to see and verify the direct flights since they are clearly listed on most (all?) airline schedules and route maps. The term 'direct flight' have been used by the travel industry and flighers for service to from point a to point b, so using that as the standard makes sense. Speaking as a past travel agent, the only issue with some customers was that they basically wanted non stop flights. So if you had to offer a direct flight with a stop or two, you had to be up front with that info. Vegaswikian 17:44, 1 June 2006 (UTC)
We should continue to list non-stop flights and ignore the "direct" flights that simply happen to be an accident of scheduling an aircraft that passes through a hub. Such "direct" flights are not scheduled on any particular rhyme or reason, and change monthly, weekly and even by the day. They also would radically complicate destination listings - for instance, US Airways had or has a direct flight from Kansas City to Oakland via Phoenix, but no direct service from Oakland to Kansas City! If we were to list spoke-hub-spoke direct destinations, we might as well abandon all hope of ever keeping destination lists up to date because it'll be well-nigh impossible to keep up with the changes. This does not apply to flights such as AQ's LAS-OAK-HNL service, which are scheduled and sold as one-stop direct flights rather than simply being a plane passing through a hub. ] 02:08, 2 June 2006 (UTC)

Pilot information

Anyone else see a problem with information like Pilot information in Ottawa Macdonald-Cartier International Airport? Vegaswikian 05:14, 1 June 2006 (UTC)

I have removed similar information from airport articles. We really don't want Misplaced Pages to try to be a source of instructional material for pilots; it's almost guaranteed to be out of date after a while, and things like approach procedures are not of interest to a general encyclopedia audience. I'd keep the diagram and runway descriptions, though. MCB 06:04, 1 June 2006 (UTC)

Help

Hi guys! we are translating article LAPA flight 3142 from Spanish into English and we're having a hard time finding some word in English. Could someone with technical knowledge give us a hand with the technical stuff? Please, take a look at the questions in Talk:LAPA flight 3142/Translation, and maybe keep it in your watchlist for future dubts. Thanks a bunch. Mariano(t/c) 10:40, 14 June 2006 (UTC)

Belfast International Airport

Anyone fancy giving Belfast International Airport a once over... I'm of the opinon that someone within the airport's been editing the article... Thanks/wangi 21:39, 14 June 2006 (UTC)

  • I wonder if all of those graphics are a copyvio? Actually most of the timeline is a copyvio from this site. Can we remove those parts without the copyvio tag being used since it is a copyvio or do we need to tag the entire article? Vegaswikian 22:41, 14 June 2006 (UTC)
Misplaced Pages:Copyright#If you find a copyright infringement says "If some of the content of a page really is an infringement, then the infringing content should be removed, and a note to that effect should be made on the talk page, along with the original source. If the author's permission is obtained later, the text can be restored." So you can remove the offending part without putting up a tag or blanking the whole article. CambridgeBayWeather (Talk) 23:49, 14 June 2006 (UTC)
I'll help on this article. --Sunholm(talk) 13:37, 18 June 2006 (UTC)
Cool, I think Vigas has fixed up the major problems, but it could still do with a look. Not got much time myself, but i'll keep a watch on the article's talk page if you're needing anything. Thanks/L/wangi 21:42, 19 June 2006 (UTC)

AFD - Latitude and longitude of airports near U.S. cities

This AFD for Latitude and longitude of airports near U.S. cities might be of interest. Thanks/wangi 13:36, 23 June 2006 (UTC)

Uncontrolled airport

Anyone want to check over the article I've created at Uncontrolled airport? Thanks. —Mets501 (talk) 16:41, 29 June 2006 (UTC)

Location identifier

Can someone look at this article. I just ran into it and it looks US centric. Probably needs a stonger mention of IATA and ICAO. Vegaswikian 18:29, 29 June 2006 (UTC)

Serves XXX

What exactly is the convention behind the "Serves..." column in the airport infobox? Is it supposed to be the largest city or metropolitan area it is serving? Or is it the city or town where the airport is physically located? Someone is putting Vantaa instead of Helsinki for the case of HEL. And I have seen inconsistencies with other airports, NRT serves Narita (physical location), while KIX serves Osaka (metro area, KIX is located outside Osaka City). ATH serves Athens, FCO serves Rome, but TPE serves Taoyuan City, instead of Taipei. Thoughts? Elektrik Blue 82 11:27, 30 June 2006 (UTC)

I was led to believe it's the closest major city; that makes the most sense. So, whatever city is listed on destination lists should be the same (i.e. HEL is listed as Helsinki (Helsinki-Vantaa Int'l), so the airport should be listed as serving Helsinki. Dbinder (talk) 13:19, 30 June 2006 (UTC)
Oh, you're now talking about the closest major city, aren't you? Well, did you know that Vantaa is actually bigger than Helsinki? That would then mean that the closest major city IS Vantaa, hence the Helsinki-Vantaa airport serves Vantaa. 88.112.101.221 14:40, 30 June 2006 (UTC)
Look at the population, not just the size. Helsinki beats Vantaa by more than around 400,000 people. I'd had enough of this lack of logic. I'd revert it continually. Elektrik Blue 82 16:22, 30 June 2006 (UTC)
IMHO in addition to cities you can take in account that there are Helsinki Metropolitan Area also exists - so Helsinki is good name. IMHO, the best Wiki rule here will be "No original research". --TAG 21:22, 30 June 2006 (UTC)

Yes in English. We use the term Pääkaupunkiseutu (Capital region). No Helsinki in that name. 88.112.101.221 13:57, 2 July 2006 (UTC)

May I remind you that this is the English Misplaced Pages. Have you ever wondered why the airport is named Helsinki-Vantaa International Airport? If the closest major city it serves is Vantaa, then why append the "Helsinki" in the first place? I find your enthusiasm to remove "Helsinki" appalling, you even removed it in the list of airports by ICAO codes. Elektrik Blue 82 16:31, 2 July 2006 (UTC)
In that case I need help or else I'll be violating the 3RR rule for the Helsinki-Vantaa Airport. Elektrik Blue 82 14:09, 30 June 2006 (UTC)
I've made a few edits. Can I suggest engaging the user in discussion on the article talk page rather than the edit history, thanks/wangi 14:20, 30 June 2006 (UTC)

I think the problem here is that the template field is named "closest town" but is rendered as "Serves". So it's always going to be confusing, because airports are usually built at the edge of metropolitan areas, and the closest town is often something few people outside the area are familiar with, and is not at all the city or region that the airport "serves". (The number of people flying in and out of Helsinki-Vantaa who are coming to or from Vantaa specifically is very small compared to Helsinki or elsewhere in the region.)

Therefore, I think the template field should be renamed "serves" or "area_served" to eliminate this confusion. In the specific case of Helsinki-Vantaa Airport I edited the infobox and inserted what I think is the most useful contents for the field, Greater Helsinki. --MCB 17:28, 2 July 2006 (UTC)

Grand Central Airport

Grand Central Airport (California). This historic airport, closed in 1959, had the first paved runway in the western U.S., was the starting or ending point of many record-breaking aviation feats, and was the principal airport of Los Angeles for several decades. Some of its history is in Glendale, California#History, but it deserves an article of its own. Anyone interested? -Will Beback 07:10, 2 July 2006 (UTC)

Additional articles listing airlines and destinations

reference

Joshbaumgartner wikilinked a few references to Belfast City Airport in some other airport articles, along with full-on wikilinking with a few airport articles. I left a comment on their talk page (ref above) pointing to the standard format we use.

Following this Josh has reverted the changes on the articles, but has instead created two new articles (Belfast International Airport connections for Belfast International Airport; George Best Belfast City Airport connections for George Best Belfast City Airport). What's everyones opinion on this?

Thanks/wangi 22:18, 15 July 2006 (UTC)

To follow the guideline in the project. This guideline is generally enough to avoid issues at AfD. Likewise, deletion on AfD is likely if you stray from those guidelines. There are still some editors who are not happy with the destination artcicles so creating a new class of articles could be drawing unwanted attention to these articles. Vegaswikian 00:52, 16 July 2006 (UTC)
Thanks, my feeling too... Although i'm not keen on AFDing them just yet. Thanks/wangi 18:12, 16 July 2006 (UTC)

External links on London Heathrow Airport

I'm currently in a discussion about a link to a page about the Heathrow Visitor Centre. The site is not the official site, does not have any encyclopedic content and has photos which are defaced with a big copyright logo. I cannot see the use in such a link, especially when the parent site is one trying to flog hotel rooms and airport transfers... So, 3rd opinion needed: Talk:London Heathrow Airport#External link to Heathrow airport centre. Thanks/wangi 18:10, 16 July 2006 (UTC)

Anyone else got an opinion on this? Thanks/wangi 11:13, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
Vegas, the disputed original link is this, while the official one is this. You might want to read the discussion in the talk page and in the edit summaries. Elektrik Blue 82 19:55, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
I did look but was having a hard time finding that. In any case, the URL is a commerical site selling travel services. So I consider that spam. I did read parts of the rather long discusion on the talk page and it's clear that this is an issue that is raising tempers. I don't consider the fact that they have an information only page a factor here. And even that page is spam by virtue of the copyright notice. Maybe we need to add a small comment in the external links topic to cover this. It was done for the airline project to help with similar problems. Vegaswikian 20:43, 17 July 2006 (UTC)

Vegas, might be useful if you left your opinion on the talk page... Yeah I know, things are getting a bit strained - I know mistakes get made, but in that discussion i'm a boogieman ;) /wangi 21:35, 17 July 2006 (UTC)

Cargo Airlines

I was wondering, is there an official policy on listing cargo airlines and destinations currently? Looking at the formating section here, I only saw the format for pax carriers, nothing about freight or regular charters. On all of the airport articles I have edited, I have simply put a sub heading below the pax airlines for the strictly cargo carriers, and then on airports such as BGR, where regular charters and tech stops are common, I have put annother sub heading below that. Also, when looking at the page for CVG, I noticed that many normal Pax carriers were double listed, also appearing under cargo carriers. I have always belived that cargo carriers should only include airlines such as FedEx, UPS, DHL, and their equivilants. It would be a help to have an official policy dictating the listing of cargo carriers here. Thanks for any input. --KPWM_Spotter 22:11, 19 July 2006 (UTC)

What additions or changes to the article structure would you suggest? Vegaswikian 22:41, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
Well, I think the Cargo Airlines should be set up just as the passenger airlines currently are. The only diference that I see would be that it would be offset as a subheading of the airline section, rather than an entire section to itself. I don't think many real changes need to be made, we just need to agree on the styling and wording, and put it up on the main page. I have annother question though; should cargo carriers use the same style of the major airline, with the carrier below it? There are regional carriers like Wiggins Airways that fly under the fedex and UPS banner, but aren't officially FedEx mainline. Should we classify those the same as Comair and GoJet are? --KPWM_Spotter 00:07, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
I changed the indent level on your reply. The format and rules for listing the airlines should be the same for pax and cargo and anything else. There should be a basic standard that applies and unless what we have does not work, we should continue to use it. I think that cargo needs to be a section since it is really very different from what many people think about when you say airline. I'm not sure what your quetion about Comair and GoJet is? Are you asking about the categories they are placed in? If so, then the answer is to add all that apply. I have added a few for Wiggins. Vegaswikian 00:22, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
I probably could have been more clear on the Comair comment. I was asking whether small feeder lines operating under the FedEx baner should be placed below FedEx and indented, as comercial feeders are. I have been adding Wiggins as a seperate airline...but I now see I probably shouldn't. I agree that what we have now works...but what we have isn't official. I'm going to add a note on the WP:Airports style section simply stating what is now in place. --KPWM_Spotter 00:30, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
On second thought, I'll wait before making that change. Most major airports don't list cargo operators as of now. I want to hear more opinions before changing the oficial policy. --KPWM_Spotter 00:36, 20 July 2006 (UTC)

Dab in destination lists

There's been a bit of reverting recently on the UK airport articles, in particular for Manchester and Birmingham entries. There seems to be a disagreement on if disambiguation is required, if it should always be done, or...

Personally I feel that that entries should be "bare" and without disambiguation if it's plainly clear the airport intended - for example from a regional UK airport it's clear these refer to the UK airports, not the US ones. Additionally for the likes of LHR where there could maybe be a service to the US cities (but there's not) the UK ones should be left bare and dismbiguation tagged onto the US entries. Reverse this for US artport destination lists...

What does everyone else think? /wangi 14:37, 20 July 2006 (UTC)

  • My opinion is that an airport should be listed the same in each article's destination list. This is part of what an encylopedia does as a part of its style sheet. We maintain a common look and feel across all articles. Vegaswikian 18:47, 20 July 2006 (UTC)