Commercial operators, including
scheduled airline,
air cargo and
air taxi operators, will usually use an
ICAO or
FAA-registered call sign for their company. By ICAO Annex 10 Chapter 5.2.1.7.2.1 - Full call signs type C, a call sign consists of the
telephony designator of the aircraft operating agency, followed by the flight identification. The flight identification is very often the same as the
flight number, but could be different to avoid call sign confusion, if two or more flights close to each other have similar flight numbers (e.g. KLM649 and KLM645 or BAW466 and BAW646). For example,
British Airways flight 75 would use the call sign
Speedbird Seven–Five, since
Speed-bird is the telephony designator for British Airways and 75 would be the flight identification. (The telephony designator is not the same as the call sign, although the two are sometimes conflated.)
Pan Am had the telephony designator of
Clipper (
see list). For these call signs, proper usage varies by country. In some countries, such as the United States, numbers are spoken normally (for the example above,
Speed-bird Seventy-five) instead of being spelled out digit by digit, leading to the possibility of confusion. In most other countries, including the United Kingdom, they are spelled out. Air taxi operators in the United States sometimes do not have a registered call sign, in which case the prefix
T is used, followed by the aircraft registration number (e.g.,
Tango-November-Niner-Seven-Eight-Charlie-Papa). Some variations of call signs exist to express safety concerns to all operators and controllers monitoring the transmissions. Aircraft call signs include the suffix "
heavy" for heavy aircraft to indicate an aircraft that generates significant
wake turbulence, e.g.,
United Two-Five Heavy. All aircraft capable of operating with a gross
takeoff weight of more than must use this suffix whether or not they are operating at this weight during a particular phase of flight. These are typically
Boeing 707,
Boeing 747,
Boeing 767,
Boeing 777,
Boeing 787,
Airbus A300,
Airbus A310,
Airbus A330,
Airbus A340,
Airbus A350,
DC-10,
MD-11, and
Lockheed L-1011 aircraft. Although the
Boeing 757's MTOW is less than 136 tons, it is categorized as a heavy aircraft because it generates strong
wake turbulence. The suffix "super" is used for an
Airbus A380, and was also used for the
Antonov An-225 (destroyed in 2022). For
air ambulance services or other flights involving the safety of life (such as aircraft carrying a person who has suffered a heart attack), "Medevac" is prefixed to the call sign. For flights in which life is not in direct danger (such as transporting organs for transplant), the call sign prefix "Pan-Pan-Medical" is used before the normal call sign, e.g.
Pan-Pan-Medical Three-Three-Alpha,
Pan-Pan-Medical Northwest Four-Five-Eight, or
Pan-Pan-Medical Singapore Niner-Two-Three. Pan Pan (pronounced "pahn-pahn") is the voice radio signal for "urgent", while Mayday is the voice radio signal for "distress". The word may be omitted for air ambulance services with assigned call signs, especially when they have notified air traffic control operators that they are on an air ambulance mission at the beginning of their flight and do not change from one controller to another. The
Life Flight air ambulance service, for example, might simply identify as
Life-Flight Three. An aircraft that has declared an in-flight emergency will sometimes prefix the word
Mayday to its call sign. Australia's
Royal Flying Doctors Service (RFDS) uses "FlyDoc" followed by three numbers assigned to the aircraft as their call signs. An example of this is FlyDoc425, which is based in
Bundaberg, Queensland, and used as part of their air ambulance services for the State of
Queensland. Formerly, one of the rarest call signs, "Concorde", was used to identify
British Airways'
Concorde aircraft. The intent of this call sign was to raise the air traffic control operators' awareness of the unique performance of the aircraft and the special attention it required. The call sign was appended to
British Airways' normal radio call sign, e.g.
"Speedbird-Concorde One".
Air France, the only other airline to operate the Concorde commercially, did not use the "Concorde" call sign at all in normal service; its Concorde flights simply used the standard
Airfrans call sign. ==Glider==