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Why do some resorts start with letters?

Ann-Marie

TUG Review Crew: Veteran
TUG Member
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Location
Oyster Bay, NY & Sun City, S.C.
Resorts Owned
The Summit @ Massunetten, Sheraton Desert Oasis
I just got a match for a resort that starts with E. Just curious why. Thanks.
 
What exchange company? What resort?
 
I just got a match for a resort that starts with E. Just curious why. Thanks.

Do you mean in RCI? Sometimes the resort number is four digits and sometimes there's an R in front of a three-digit number.

I know the R means that the property is usually a rental. Not sure about an E.
 
From dioxide45's "Marriott II Unit Codes" ongoing info thread:
What do the D and/or H mean at the beginning of Marriott II Unit Codes that have five characters?
The best we have been able to determine is the following; D indicates that the inventory came from a Marriott DC points bulk bank and H indicates the inventory came from a weeks Marriott based bulk bank. Four character Marriott II Unit Codes indicate the inventory came from an owner deposit.

[Note thread moved to the "Exchanging" forum.]
 
I just got a match for a resort that starts with E. Just curious why. Thanks.

I dunno, but just to complicate things, a quick glance at an old RCI directory also quickly reveals a few places with the letter "A", followed by three numbers as their RCI resort i.d. (A712 Destinations @ Crestwood, MT, A869 Wyndham Steamboat Springs, CO, A500 Beachside Village, Falmouth, MA, A319 Trade Winds, Rockland, ME,
A416 Colonial Acres, West Yarmouth, MA. Probably others -- I stumbled on these 5 in about 30 seconds, just thumbing quickly through an old (2009) RCI directory.

Why is there any letter followed by 3 numbers for a RCI resort i.d., when the vast majority of other RCI resorts are simply a four digit number? I truly dunno.... :shrug:
 
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There is nothing the mini RCI Directory about these - you just see them in front of some numbers. Some that start with C too. Maybe they are newly affiliated, in-process or limited. I know of one resort that has a C in front that is not completed and is newly affiliated.
 
The short answer to the OP: RCI was running out of 4-digit resort IDs to give to new member resorts so they started using letters.

Background:

RCI resort ID's used to all be numbers. As resorts joined RCI, they were assigned a member number, starting with resort # 1, which happens to be Fairway-Shawnee (yup, the Poconos had some of the resorts first traded through RCI). In the early years, RCI only put out a magazine-style Resort Directory and exchanges were obtained by phoning in. Adding digits or zeroes to the resort ID numbers was not complicated. It was just typed into the resort descriptions with each new year's Resort Directory.

When RCI went computerized and they offered online exchanging, all the resorts had 4-digit numerical resort ID's (IIRC). IOW, Fairway-Shawnee's resort ID# online was not # 1 - it was, as it is now, 0001 (again, IIRC). At some point, when the international resort ID #'s were reaching the 8000's and growing fast, RCI started using resort ID's that started with a letter in the first digit place.

(Note that, by this time, many resorts had multiple resort ID #'s. Older resorts had sometimes split into several resort regimes with separate management. Some resorts added new sections to older resorts. Some, especially those still in development or active sales, wanted to control where incoming exchangers could be placed within their resorts so they wanted a new ID # for each section. Ultimately, the number of new resort IDs needed was actually larger than the number of member resorts in the RCI system.)

Adding another variable digit to a computer field is not a simple matter. Remember when most computer systems only looked at a year as a 2-digit field and during the Millennium change '99 to '00, there were concerns? Changing all the member resorts' ID #'s to a 5-digit ID# (ex., making Fairway-Shawnee into ID # 00001), just to increase the total possible number of resort ID's available to fit in the system's Resort ID field was not a good option. However, potentially adding 26 letters (alpha digits) to the 10 numbers (numerical digits) to the acceptable form of data in RCI's computer systems' Resort ID fields would dramatically increase the possible number of discreet resort IDs available. And this was probably a much easier IT fix than making all the 4-digit fields into 5-digit fields.

If you do a quick search of all U.S. resorts on the RCI Resort Directory online, display the results, ordered by RCI's Resort IDs, and click through, you'll see that the numbers go up, one at a time, to #8897 (Holiday Inn Club Orange Lake North Village), then switch to A000 (WorldMark Granby Rocky Mtn Preserve). However, the earliest alpha RCI Resort IDs did not all begin with the letter A and they have not been added to the system in alphanumerical order either.

At this time, I see U.S. resorts with Resort ID #'s: xxxx, Axxx, Cxxx, Dxxx and Exxx, but no Bxxx at this time, primarily for exchanging. Some make sense with the resort's name, such as Disney Vacation Club's, whose week-long exchanges are listed with Resort ID #'s DVxx. I don't know if other starting letters are used for other specific companies or for specific countries either.

RCI week-long rentals may show under any resort ID but some resort ID's appear to be strictly rental inventory: Rxxx.
Short stays (3-nights, 4-nights, or 5-weekday-nights), either exchange or rental, appear with another distinct ID: Sxxx.

Hope that makes sense. :) Probably MUCH more info than you expected or wanted! LOL!
 
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It is an RCI exchange. Surfsong 8 Wyndham E962
 
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It is an RCI exchange. Surfsong 8 Wyndham E962

Did you see my post on your other thread? Its not a timeshare it timeshare. It is a vacation property that Wyndham manages or manages the rentals. They take out deposited exchanges for every non timeshare property they deposit. They also often have housekeeping fees even for the 7 night week stay listed in the important advisements. At least these are most of the E... one's I have seen.
 
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