Definition
Successive generations of GPS satellites built by the U.S. Department of Defense and operated by the U.S. Space Force as part of the GPS satellite constellation. Block II was the first operational generation, Block IIA added improved data storage and longer autonomous operation, Block IIR (Replenishment) provided on-orbit replacements with better atomic clocks and inter-satellite ranging, and Block IIR-M (Modernized) added a second civil signal (L2C) and new military M-code signals.
Plain English
These are the names for different versions of GPS satellites that have been launched over the years. Each version improved on the one before it, with better clocks, stronger signals, and new features. Together they made up the working GPS constellation that pilots have relied on for navigation.
Context Anchor
Seen in GPS system descriptions, especially when explaining the satellite portion of GPS.
Derivation
The word 'block' here means a group or batch of satellites built to the same design — like a production run. Roman numerals (II, IIA, IIR) mark the generation, and the letters tag the variant: 'A' for Advanced, 'R' for Replenishment (replacing older satellites), and 'M' for Modernized.
Why Pilots Care
Determines which GPS signals and performance levels are available for enroute and approach navigation.
Analogy
Think of them like different model years of the same aircraft type. They all do the same basic job, but newer versions may have improved equipment.
Intuition Check
Do not read “Block” as an obstacle or a city block. In this context, it means a production series of GPS satellites.
Example Sentence 1
The GPS constellation a pilot relies on today is made up of a mix of Block IIR, IIR-M, and newer satellites working together.
Example Sentence 2
IIR-M satellites provide the additional civil signal that improves accuracy for instrument approaches.