Encyclopedia > Wikipedia:Naming conventions (aircraft)

  Article Content

Wikipedia:Naming conventions (aircraft)

For article titles, use the most common unambiguous name. A central tenet of wikipedia naming conventions is to give articles names that will be have the greatest chance of being directly linked to within an edit window of another article. Alternative names should be listed in bold type on or near the first line of the article.

Create redirects from all the more common alternative names. For example, the main article for the Douglas DC-3 should be at Douglas DC-3; redirects to it at DC-3, C-47, Douglas Dakota, Gooney Bird and Gooney bird.

In general, the best names to use are:

  • US civil aircraft: Manufacturer and name or number as appropriate according to common usage: Boeing 707, Cessna Citation[?], Cessna 172, Convair 880 (not "Convair Skylark" or "Convair Golden Arrow". Try to avoid using name and number unless it is clearly needed for some reason.

  • Soviet aircraft: Manufacturer and number: Mikoyan MiG-21, Sukhoi Su-27, Tupolev Tu-144. (But there are exceptions: the Sturmovik is best known by that name.) Use of the NATO reporting name—which has nothing to do with the wishes of the people who designed, made, bought, and flew the aircraft—is offensive and should be avoided, though it can be mentioned as an alternative name in the text if appropriate.

  • Japanese aircraft. Manufacturer and number: Nakajima B5N[?] or Kawasaki Ki-61[?]. Foreign reporting names like "Zeke", "Tony", "Betty" and "Kate" are offensive and should be avoided, but can be mentioned in the text where appropriate. We no longer write "Mao Tse-tung", we have learned to use "Mao Zedung". We can learn to use the proper Japanese names too.

  • Mixed origin aircraft such as the BAE Hawk[?] made under licence by McDonnell-Douglas/Boeing as the T-45 Goshawk[?], or a great many Sikorsky helicopters made under licence by Westland need to be treated on their merits. Often, two seperate articles will be needed anyway - like the present Hawker Siddeley Harrier and AV-8 Harrier II. If not, primacy should usually go to the design manufacturer rather than the one making it under licence.

(This is a draft set of naming conventions. Feel free to edit it, or comment on the talk page)



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Museums in England

... St. Ives[?] Cumbria Abbot Hall Art Gallery[?], Kendal[?] Beatrix Potter Gallery[?], Hawkshead[?] Cumberland Pencil Museum[?], Keswick Dock Museum[?], ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 23.1 ms