Is er een criterium om de Belgische militaire van burgerluchtvaartuigadressen te onderscheiden (24-bits Mode S adressen).
Voor de Nederlandse militaire luchtvaart vond ik dit (het tiende bit is 1 bij burger- en 0 voor de militaire toestellen - maar dat klopt zeker niet voor de Belgische opdeling) ?
Voor de Belgische zocht ik me suf, maar vond niks.
Dit zou een en ander vergemakkelijken om ze te spotten in Plane Plotter logs.
Onderscheid Belgische militaire en burgerluchtvaartuigen ?
Moderator: joost
Forum rules
![]() |
Re: Onderscheid Belgische militaire en burgerluchtvaartuigen
Regarding your question, although not 24 Bits. I believe Belgium Mil Hexcodes always starts with 44Fxxx
For USAF most hexcodes starts with AExxxx or ADFxxx , Netherlands Airforce 480xxx
I have to admit, I am not sure if this is 100% correct.
Hope it is of any help in your quest.
Grtz
Joost
EDIT, just received word this topic was moved from other forum where Dutch is allowed.
For USAF most hexcodes starts with AExxxx or ADFxxx , Netherlands Airforce 480xxx
I have to admit, I am not sure if this is 100% correct.
Hope it is of any help in your quest.
Grtz
Joost
EDIT, just received word this topic was moved from other forum where Dutch is allowed.
Re: Onderscheid Belgische militaire en burgerluchtvaartuigen
This is definitely not true as the newest military aircraft - an Airbus A321-231 'CS-TRJ' -joost wrote:Regarding your question, although not 24 Bits. I believe Belgium Mil Hexcodes always starts with 44Fxxx
has ICAO address 4CAB63.
Nor do 44ED81/M-1, 44C1E9/G-16 and several others obbey the alledged 44Fxxx address scheme.
I'd rather see some quoted source rather than guesswork.
Hans.
- Henk Voortwijs
- Scramble Master
- Posts: 3591
- Joined: 13 Jan 2004, 20:56
- Type of spotter: Radio monitoring
- Subscriber Scramble: Henk
- Location: Vogelwaarde, The Netherlands
- Contact:
Re: Onderscheid Belgische militaire en burgerluchtvaartuigen
Then why ask this on this forum Hans? Joost is just helping out here, give him a break. And he is right so far, maybe newer birds do have different hexcodes, because the old ones are al taken? Maybe you should ask your question to Albert, how his software divides mil and civil hexcodes for the logs on his website http://www.live-military-mode-s.eu/ & http://www.live-civil-mode-s.eu/. That probably answers your question. Good luck.petoetje wrote:I'd rather see some quoted source rather than guesswork.
Hans.
BC785D;UBC780XLT;UBC3500XLT;UBC9000XLT