| Identifier | Name | Coordinates | Type | Municipality | Region | Country |
| 07F | Gladewater Municipal Airport | 32.5288333, -94.97175 | Small Airport | Gladewater County | Texas | United States |
| KGGG | East-Texas Regional Airport | 32.3840144, -94.7114867 | Medium Airport | Gregg County | Texas | United States |
| KRFI | Rusk County Airport | 32.1417222, -94.8517222 | Small Airport | Henderson County | Texas | United States |
| K4F2 | Panola County Airport-Sharpe Field | 32.1760833, -94.2988056 | Small Airport | Carthage | Texas | United States |
| KASL | Harrison County Airport | 32.5205, -94.3077778 | Small Airport | Harrison County | Texas | United States |
| KJXI | Gilmer Municipal | 32.6980299, -94.9488467 | Small Airport | Gilmer | Texas | United States |
Above is a list of custom locations that you have
defined. A custom location is a place you have flown to or flown over that
does not have an official FAA/ICAO/IATA identifier. If you are trying to log a
flight to an airport which is not in the FlightLogg.in airport database,
a better solution is to go to OurAirports
and create a new page for that airport. The data will eventually make its way into
FlightLogg.in's database from there.
To use a custom location in a flight, just use the identifier you have defined above. To force the use of a custom location, prefix the identifier with a "!". For instance, a flight from "DEN - !DEN - DEN" would be from Denver, to a custom identifier you have defined as "DEN", then back to Denver.
To use a custom location as a flyover point, prefix it with a "@". So a flight from Denver, then flying over a custom point called "CUS", then landing back at Denver would be "DEN - !@CUS - DEN". It is important to log fly-over points accurately to differentiate between flights that quality for Point to Point XC.
To use a custom location in a flight, just use the identifier you have defined above. To force the use of a custom location, prefix the identifier with a "!". For instance, a flight from "DEN - !DEN - DEN" would be from Denver, to a custom identifier you have defined as "DEN", then back to Denver.
To use a custom location as a flyover point, prefix it with a "@". So a flight from Denver, then flying over a custom point called "CUS", then landing back at Denver would be "DEN - !@CUS - DEN". It is important to log fly-over points accurately to differentiate between flights that quality for Point to Point XC.
| New Location | [X] |
