Terrestrial based tracking with very high levels of GPS accuracy for most aircraft. Some older
aircraft use inertial reference units instead of GPS for positions, decreasing positional accuracy.
Read more
Satellite based tracking with very high levels of GPS accuracy for most aircraft. Some older aircraft use
inertial reference units instead of GPS for positions, decreasing positional accuracy.
Read more
Terrestrial based tracking using the time difference of arrival to calculate position. Should
give high positional accuracy during most phases of flight, but position errors can sometimes occur. The
ground speed is calculated and can sometimes be incorrect, especially during turns and at low altitudes.
Vertical speed is also calculated, so errors can sometimes occur. Altitude data come from the transponder
and should be correct.
Read more
Terrestrial based tracking used in light aircraft, such as gliders. Variable levels of data quality based on
limited tracking capabilities for gliders. Data provided by the
Open Glider Network.
3rd party data covering North America and certain oceanic regions around North America,
aggregated from different data sources. Provided to Flightradar24 as is with variable quality based on
multiple factors.
Read more
An aircraft’s position may be estimated for up to 240 minutes after coverage has been lost based
on the great circle path between the last received position and destination. Accuracy of estimated positions
will vary based on time since last received position and flight route.
Read more
This aircraft is broadcasting an invalid transponder code due to malfunction or incorrect
programming. As the ICAO 24-bit address is incorrect, it’s often impossible to identify the aircraft.
Read more
Leave A Comment