Air Canada Inaugurates Motorcoach Service Linking Hamilton and Region of Waterloo Airports with Toronto Pearson
Air Canada has begun offering residents of the Hamilton-Wentworth and Waterloo Region more convenient, one-stop access to the airline's global network and a world of travel possibilities.
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Fokker passenger jet makes triumphant return to Lethbridge
An artifact of aviation history has made its way to Lethbridge following a long journey.
It’s approximately 85 feet long with 65 seats and now the Time Air Fokker F28-1000 passenger jet is back in the city it used to fly in.
It was bought by the Time Air Historical Society in 2019 from a company in Saskatoon and sat in that city for 22 years before it received a new home. “The aircraft itself is one of four that we currently own,” says Rik Barry, the chairman of the Time Air Historical Society.
Full story at: globalnews.ca
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Continuation of the DC-6 story started in NetLetter #1531 and 1532 -
Life with Wardair Wardair will need little introduction to readers. Its dynamic founder Max Ward built up a thriving bush operation based out of Yellowknife in Canada's Northwest Territories, with such types as the de Havilland Beaver and Otter and Bristol Freighter. He decided to diversify into operating passenger charters, and for this purpose Wardair took CF-CZZ on lease from Canadian Pacific.
Before its passenger work it was used from March 1962 onwards, during the late winter and early spring of that year, on a freight operation in the High Arctic under contract to the Polar Continental Shelf project. The main freighting operation was out of Resolute Bay to the weather stations at Isachsen, Eureka, Alert and Mould Bay as well as Thule Air Base in Greenland.
One of the stipulations of the lease contract was that Wardair would make the aircraft available to CPA if it was needed to help with the repair of any CPAL aircraft. Just such a requirement arose during April 1962 when a CPAL DC-8 went unserviceable in Honolulu and required an engine change. While CF-CZZ was busy freighting in the frozen wastes of the High Arctic, the call came that its services were needed in sunny Hawaii.
After two trips to Isachsen on Ellef Ringnes Island, CF-CZZ departed Resolute Bay on April 19, overnighted at Yellowknife, and then flew via Fort Smith and Edmonton to Vancouver.
The spare Rolls-Royce jet engine was loaded and flown to Honolulu, after which the crew "hit the beach" for the day, before returning to the frozen wastes of northern Canada, their job done.
When the freighting operation ended in the spring, Wardair commenced its programme of passenger charters with CF-CZZ. As Max Ward wrote in his autobiography: "Our first overseas charter came on June 22, 1962 when we took a group from Edmonton to Copenhagen with stops at Frobisher Bay and Prestwick. During that summer we completed eight overseas charters out of western Canada to the UK and Europe, and lost money on every one of them." One of these charters was to London, where CF-CZZ was noted at Heathrow on July 16 and 18, 1962.
Perhaps due to the harshness he himself had endured as a pilot in the bush, Max Ward was determined to treat his passengers well. He was the first to serve all passengers a filet steak on Royal Dalton bone china that was the hallmark of Wardair's renowned cabin service. CF-CZZ may have been "relegated" to a charter company, but it was still flying in considerable style.
When the summer charter season ended in September 1962, Wardair could not find any work for the DC-6, and so it returned the aircraft off lease to CPA, who made use of it that winter and for most of 1963. Grant McConachie, CPA's president, is reported to have said that he made more money leasing it to Wardair than he could have made flying it. In March 1963 Wardair bought a Douglas DC-6B from KLM to continue its charter programme, and this aircraft became CF-PCI. On September 6 1963 Wardair took another lease of CF-CZZ from CPA for an Arctic freight contract, but this work had barely started when disaster struck.
On September 15, 1963 CF-CZZ was on approach to Mould Bay, North West Territories, on a flight from Resolute Bay. The rear fuselage and tail hit a rock outcrop when white-out conditions were encountered, and an overshoot attempted. Four days later, CF-CZZ was ferried in its damaged state from Mould Bay via Edmonton to Vancouver, where it was returned off lease to CPA, who repaired the damage. That unfortunate incident brought an end to the aircraft's association with Wardair.
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CF-CZZ London-Heathrow circa 1963 Photo courtesy of Dave Welch |
CF-TOA - Air Canada's first Boeing 747
The reprint of Bill Norberg's memories of the delivery of Air Canada's first Boeing 747 got me wondering the lifecycle of the first B-747 to enter service with a Canadian airline.
Line #104, MSN 20013 was delivered to Air Canada on February 11, 1971, registered as CF-TOA fin # 301.
I have only vague memories of seeing this aircraft and I know that I never had the opportunity to fly on it. I do recall a seeing a few aircraft with the patch of black between the windshield and the radome.
As per Planespotters.net, the aircraft remained in service with AC until leased Global International Airways of Kansas City in June 1983. It was briefly returned to AC (photo below) before being sold to Guinness Peat Aviation and going through a series of leases under various registrations until scrapped sometime around 1995.
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Original ad for the introduction on the B-747
Supplied by Terry Baker
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Leased to Global International Airways
Photo courtesy of Pierre Langlois
Taken at Montréal - Pierre Elliott Trudeau International
October 1983 |
With Flying Tigers registration N890FT
Photo courtesy of Marc Lehmann
Taken at Frankfurt am Main
May 31, 1988
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