I was trying to get a list of all ILS approaches in the US, which brought me to the FAA Aeronautical Product Release API to retrieve all the DTPP (Digital-Terminal Procedures Publication) as five zip files.
I noticed the naming conventions of the files began with a five digit number (left padded with zeros). For instance, SEA ILS RW 16C (CAT II & III) had the name: 00582I16CC2_3.PDF
Although it is easy enough to parse out the remainder of the name (I for ILS, 16 is the RWY, ...), it was this five digit number I was most interested in.
Previously, I happened to noticed that all approaches at a single airport had the same AL number at the top of the approach (at the time, I didn't even know what AL stood for). See the top margin:
Aeronautical Chart Users' Guide
I went to the Aeronautical Chart Users' Guide and found in the Section Instrument Approach Procedure Chart under U.S. Terminal Procedures Publication (p.98 on 2/23/24) some information:
At the center of the top margin is the FAA numbering system. This Approach and Landing (AL) number is followed by the organization responsible for the procedure in parentheses, e.g., AL-18 (FAA). Military procedures do no show an AL number, but do show the appropriate authority for the procedure, e.g., (USAF).
My questions:
Where can I find the mapping of Approach and Landing numbers to "organization responsible for the procedure in parentheses"?
Are these "organization's" just airports? Or might it include something that aggregates multiple airports in disparate locations?
Does anyone know where to find the document that would describe the DTPP naming convention?
Thanks