fbpx
Wikipedia

Combi aircraft

Combi aircraft in commercial aviation are aircraft that can be used to carry either passengers as an airliner, or cargo as a freighter, and may have a partition in the aircraft cabin to allow both uses at the same time in a mixed passenger/freight combination. The name combi comes from the word combination. The concept previously existed in railroading, as a passenger car that contained a separate compartment for mail and/or baggage.

Boeing 737-400 combi aircraft of First Air with passenger windows behind the wing but not ahead
737-300 Combi interior

Combi aircraft typically feature an oversized cargo door, as well as tracks on the cabin floor to allow the seats to be added or removed quickly.

Typically, configured for both passenger and cargo duty, the passenger compartment is pressurized to a higher pressure, to prevent potential fumes from cargo entering the passenger area.[citation needed]

Airlines

Northwest Airlines

In 1963, Northwest Airlines operated a domestic and International routing with a Douglas DC-7C four engine propeller aircraft between New York Idlewild Airport (which would subsequently be renamed JFK Airport) and Tokyo that was configured to transport a mixed passenger/cargo load.

The round trip routing for this flight which was operated once a week was New York-Chicago-Seattle-Anchorage-Tokyo.

The DC-7C was configured with all economy seating in the passenger cabin.[1]

By 1966, Northwest was operating jet combi service with Boeing 707-320C aircraft between the U.S. and Asia.[2]

Braniff International

In 1968, Braniff International was flying Boeing 727-100QC ("Quick Change") jetliners in a configuration that facilitated the transportation of palletized freight containers as well as 51 passengers in an all-economy-class cabin in scheduled airline operations.[3]

According to a Braniff system timetable dated July 1, 1968, the airline was operating weekday "red eye flights" with round trip services at night with its B727 combi aircraft on the following routings: New York (JFK) - Washington, D.C. (IAD) - Nashville (BNA) - Memphis (MEM) - Dallas Love Field (DAL); Seattle (SEA) - Portland (PDX) - Dallas Love Field (DAL); and Denver (DEN) - Dallas Love Field (DAL).

The freight pallets were loaded in the front section of the aircraft by forklift via a large cargo door located on the side of the fuselage aft of the flight deck while passengers boarded and deplaned via the integral air stairs located at the rear underneath the trijet's engines.

These aircraft could also be quickly changed to fly either all cargo or all passenger operations and Braniff flew the B727QC in both configurations besides operating in a mixed passenger/freight combi mode.

Continental Micronesia

An additional U.S. operator of the Boeing 727-100 Combi was Continental Micronesia (known as "Air Mike") which in 1983 operated mixed passenger/freight flights with the aircraft between Honolulu and Guam on its "Island Hopper" service.[4]

One such 727 combi service operated by Continental Micronesia was flight 562 which departed Guam every Tuesday at 3:30pm and then arrived in Honolulu at 7:41am the next morning with en route stops being made at such Pacific island destinations as Truk, Pohnpei (formerly Ponape), Kwajalein, Majuro and Johnston Island.

LAN-Chile

LAN-Chile (now LATAM Chile) was operating Boeing 727-100 combi service between the U.S. and Latin America three times a week in 1970 with service from New York City John F. Kennedy Airport (JFK) and Miami (MIA).[5] According to its October 25, 1970 system timetable, 727 combi routings operated by LAN-Chile included New York JFK - Miami - Cali, Colombia - Guayaquil, Ecuador - Lima, Peru - Santiago, Chile - Buenos Aires, Argentina - Montevideo, Uruguay as well as New York JFK - Miami - Panama City, Panama - Cali, Colombia - Lima, Peru - Santiago, Chile - Buenos Aires, Argentina - Montevideo, Uruguay and New York JFK - Miami - Panama City, Panama - Guayaquil, Ecuador - Lima, Peru - Santiago, Chile - Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Royal Brunei Airlines

In 1983, Asian operator Royal Brunei Airlines operated nonstop combi service with the Boeing 737-200QC between its home base of Bandar Seri Begawan in Brunei and Bangkok, Hong Kong and Singapore.[6]

KLM

KLM Royal Dutch Airlines is a long time combi user. According to the May 15, 1971 KLM system timetable, the airline operated Douglas DC-8 combi jetliners in mixed passenger/freight services between its hub located at the Amsterdam Schiphol Airport (AMS) and the following destinations: Amman, Anchorage, Bangkok, Brazzaville, Chicago O'Hare Airport, Houston Intercontinental Airport, Jakarta, Johannesburg, Kuala Lumpur, Mexico City, Montreal, New York City JFK Airport, Singapore, Teheran, Tokyo, Tripoli and Zurich.[7] KLM's DC-8 combi aircraft featured all coach service with no first class cabin.

KLM retired its last 747-400M in 2020

Air France and Lufthansa

Other European airlines operating combi aircraft in the past included Air France and Lufthansa which both operated Boeing 747 combis.

According to the Official Airline Guide (OAG), during the early 1980s Air France flew 747 combi service between France and destinations in Africa, Asia, Canada, Mexico, the Mideast, South America and the U.S. including Anchorage, Chicago O'Hare Airport, Houston Intercontinental Airport and Los Angeles while Lufthansa operated 747 combis between Germany and destinations in Africa, Asia, Australia, the Mideast, South America and the U.S. including Anchorage, Boston, Dallas/Fort Worth, Los Angeles, New York JFK Airport, Philadelphia, San Francisco and San Juan.[8]

In both cases, Anchorage was used as a technical stop by the Air France and Lufthansa combi services on the polar route between Europe and Japan.

Other combi aircraft operators

A number of other airlines also flew Boeing 747 combis during the 1980s including Air Canada, Air Gabon, Air India (Boeing 747-300 combi version), Alitalia, Avianca, CAAC Airlines, Cameroon Airlines, China Airlines, El Al, Iberia Airlines, Iraqi Airways, Pakistan International Airlines, Qantas, Royal Jordanian Airlines, Sabena, EVA AIR, South African Airways, Swissair, UTA and Varig.[9] Air Canada also earlier operated Douglas DC-8 combi aircraft. In addition, Sabena was operating McDonnell Douglas DC-10-30 combis at this time as well.[10] There was also a combi version of the successor to the DC-10 being the McDonnell Douglas MD-11C which was operated by Alitalia. Uganda Airlines operated Boeing 707 combi aircraft. During the early 1990s, Garuda Indonesia Airlines was operating Boeing 747 combis between Jakarta and Los Angeles via Honolulu.[11] Alaska Airlines also flew the 737-400 combi on a multi-stop "milk run" route from Anchorage to Ketchikan to Wrangell to Petersburg to Seattle and then back to Anchorage as well as on other routes in Alaska.

 
A South African Airways 747-200M combi aircraft that crashed in 1987 as South African Airways Flight 295.

Some now defunct airlines from embattled nations flew combi aircraft. Air Rhodesia had a Boeing 720 combi that it operated when Rhodesia was a nation, acquired in 1967 and flown till shortly after the dissolution of the nation and state airline. It was sold to South African Airways which because of the apartheid regime flew a number of combi aircraft.[12] One of the most infamous of these was the South African Airways Flight 295, a Boeing 747 combi named Helderberg, which was a scheduled commercial flight from Taiwan to South Africa that suffered a catastrophic in-flight fire in the cargo area and crashed into the Indian Ocean east of Mauritius on 28 November 1987, killing everyone on board.[13] Air Vietnam the official state airline of South Vietnam possessed at least one Boeing 727-100 combi that it had obtained from Continental Air Services (CASI), a subsidiary airline of Continental Airlines set up to provide operations and airlift support in Southeast Asia, in the mid-1960s. Under this agreement, CASI would share passengers and cargo routes with Air Vietnam on certain domestic and international routes.[14] During the Fall of Saigon it was destroyed during shelling of Tan Son Nhat International Airport.[15]

Two airlines based in Iceland also operated combi aircraft: Icelandair flying Boeing 727-100 and Boeing 737-200 combis, and Eagle Air (Iceland) flying Boeing 737-200 combis.[16] Both air carriers operated their Boeing combi jets on flights between Iceland and western Europe.

Air Marshall Islands was a somewhat exotic combi aircraft operator flying a Douglas DC-8-62CF jetliner in mixed passenger/freight operations. According to the Official Airline Guide (OAG), Air Marshall Islands was operating a DC-8 combi on scheduled services linking Honolulu with the Pacific islands of Kwajalein and Majuro during the early 1990s.[17] Air Marshall Islands is still currently in existence flying regional turboprops but no longer operates combi jet aircraft.

Alaska Airlines was a long time combi operator flying various Boeing jet models in combi configuration (see below). There were several other combi aircraft operators as well in Alaska in the past including MarkAir with Boeing 737-200s and de Havilland Canada DHC-7 Dash 7s, Reeve Aleutian Airways with Boeing 727-100 jets and Lockheed L-188 Electra turboprops, Western Airlines with Lockheed L-188 Electras and Wien Air Alaska with Boeing 737-200s and Fairchild F-27B turboprops. Wien was the launch customer for the combi version of the B737-200 while Wien predecessor Northern Consolidated Airlines was the first operator of the Fairchild F-27B which was combi version of the Fairchild Hiller FH-227.

A number of airlines in Canada also flew combi aircraft besides Air Canada and its Douglas DC-8 and Boeing 747 combi services including First Air with Boeing 727-100 and 727-200 jetliners in addition to Hawker Siddeley HS 748 turboprops. First Air continues to operate combi aircraft at the present time including Boeing 737-200 and 737-400 jetliners as well as the ATR 42 turboprop.[18] Two other current combi operators in Canada are Air North operating the Boeing 737-200 jet and Hawker Siddeley HS 748 turboprop, and Canadian North flying Boeing 737-200 jets and de Havilland Canada DHC-8-100 Dash 8 turboprop aircraft. Other combi operators in Canada in the past included CP Air and Pacific Western with both airlines flying Boeing 727-100 and Boeing 737-200 combi aircraft as well as Nordair operating Boeing 737-200 combi aircraft.

In 2008 Aviation Traders designed a Boeing 757-200 combi aircraft leased from Astraeus Airlines for the heavy metal band Iron Maiden.[19] The front of the aircraft was configured for passengers, with the rear holding six tonnes of cargo consisting of Iron Maiden's equipment for their tour. The band supported their most recent[when?] tour with a Boeing 747-400 leased from Air Atlanta Icelandic.

Conversions

Nowadays,[when?] many airlines have converted their combis into full passenger service or full freighter service for the potential of more profitable operations.[citation needed]

Alaska Airlines combi service

Alaska Airlines operated converted narrow body Boeing 737-400 combis that were previously flown in full passenger configuration.[20] According to the Alaska Airlines website, the airline was operating several Boeing 737-400 combi aircraft with each jetliner configured with 72 passenger seats in the coach compartment. The airline then announced the retirement of these aircraft with the last combi flight scheduled for October 18, 2017.[21] On that date, Alaska Airlines flight 66 was the airline's last scheduled combi flight with the Boeing 737-400 (N764AS) operating a routing of Anchorage (ANC) - Cordova (CDV) - Yakutat (YAK) - Juneau (JNU) - Seattle (SEA).[22]

The 737-400 aircraft replaced Boeing 737-200 combis that were formerly operated by Alaska Airlines, which was the only major U.S. air carrier still flying scheduled combi operations domestically with service between Seattle and Alaska and also between Anchorage, Fairbanks and remote destinations in Alaska.[23]

Alaska Airlines previously operated Boeing 727-100C aircraft which were also capable of combi operations[24] and has now added Boeing 737-700 freighter all-cargo aircraft to its fleet which have replaced its Boeing 737-400 combi aircraft.[25]

Notable combi passenger aircraft

See also

References

  1. ^ http://www.timetableimages.com; Northwest Airlines March 1, 1963 system timetable, pages 8 & 14
  2. ^ http://www.timetableimages.com, March 1, 1966 Northwest Airlines system timetable
  3. ^ http://www.timetableimages.com, Braniff International July 1, 1968 system timetable, page 30
  4. ^ http://www.departedflights.com, July 1, 1983 Worldwide Edition, Official Airline Guide (OAG), Guam & Honolulu flight schedules for Continental Micronesia
  5. ^ http://www.timetableimages.com, Oct. 25, 1970 LAN-Chile system timetable
  6. ^ http://www.departedflights.com, July 1, 1983 Worldwide Edition, Official Airline Guide (OAG), Bandar Seri Begawan flight schedules
  7. ^ http://www.timetableimages.com, May 15, 1971 KLM system timetable, Freight Services
  8. ^ http://www.departedflights.com, July 1, 1983 Official Airline Guide (OAG) Worldwide Edition, Frankfurt & Paris flight schedules
  9. ^ http://www.departedflights.com, July 1, 1983 & Jan. 9, 1989 Official Airline Guide (OAG) Worldwide Editions
  10. ^ http://www.departedflights.com, July 1, 1983 Official Airline Guide (OAG) Worldwide Edition
  11. ^ Oct. 1, 1993 OAG Desktop Flight Guide, Worldwide Edition
  12. ^ "Airline History From 1996". Sky Host. 11 April 1996. Retrieved 11 December 2011.
  13. ^ Cheney, Daniel I. (2010). Lessons Learned from Transport Airplane Accidents (PDF). Sixth Triennial International Fire and Cabin Safety Research Conference. Atlantic City: Federal Aviation Administration
  14. ^ "World Airline Directory". Flight International. 10 April 1969. 557
  15. ^ Accounts of Operation Frequent Wind can be found in Spencer (s.v. "FREQUENT WIND, Operation"), Todd (346-387), and Isaacs.
  16. ^ http://www.departedflights.com, July 1, 1983 Official Airline Guide (OAG), Reykjavik-Keflavik International Airport flight schedules
  17. ^ Official Airline Guide, October 1993 edition, flight schedules for Kwajalein (KWA) and Majuro (MAJ)
  18. ^ "Home". firstair.ca.
  19. ^ "Our Work - Iron Maiden Boeing 757 Cabin Configuration".
  20. ^ "Boeing 737-400 Combi Aircraft Information".
  21. ^ "Alaska Air Cargo introduces world's first converted 737-700 freighter". 26 September 2017.
  22. ^ http://www.flightaware.com N764AS
  23. ^ http://www.alaskaair.com, Flight Information, Downloadable Timetables
  24. ^ http://www.airliners.net, photos of Alaska Airlines Boeing 727-100C aircraft
  25. ^ "Cargo freighter service | Alaska Airlines Cargo".

combi, aircraft, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, september,. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Combi aircraft news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Combi aircraft in commercial aviation are aircraft that can be used to carry either passengers as an airliner or cargo as a freighter and may have a partition in the aircraft cabin to allow both uses at the same time in a mixed passenger freight combination The name combi comes from the word combination The concept previously existed in railroading as a passenger car that contained a separate compartment for mail and or baggage Boeing 737 400 combi aircraft of First Air with passenger windows behind the wing but not ahead 737 300 Combi interior Combi aircraft typically feature an oversized cargo door as well as tracks on the cabin floor to allow the seats to be added or removed quickly Typically configured for both passenger and cargo duty the passenger compartment is pressurized to a higher pressure to prevent potential fumes from cargo entering the passenger area citation needed Contents 1 Airlines 1 1 Northwest Airlines 1 2 Braniff International 1 3 Continental Micronesia 1 4 LAN Chile 1 5 Royal Brunei Airlines 1 6 KLM 1 7 Air France and Lufthansa 1 8 Other combi aircraft operators 1 9 Conversions 1 10 Alaska Airlines combi service 2 Notable combi passenger aircraft 3 See also 4 ReferencesAirlines EditNorthwest Airlines Edit In 1963 Northwest Airlines operated a domestic and International routing with a Douglas DC 7C four engine propeller aircraft between New York Idlewild Airport which would subsequently be renamed JFK Airport and Tokyo that was configured to transport a mixed passenger cargo load The round trip routing for this flight which was operated once a week was New York Chicago Seattle Anchorage Tokyo The DC 7C was configured with all economy seating in the passenger cabin 1 By 1966 Northwest was operating jet combi service with Boeing 707 320C aircraft between the U S and Asia 2 Braniff International Edit In 1968 Braniff International was flying Boeing 727 100QC Quick Change jetliners in a configuration that facilitated the transportation of palletized freight containers as well as 51 passengers in an all economy class cabin in scheduled airline operations 3 According to a Braniff system timetable dated July 1 1968 the airline was operating weekday red eye flights with round trip services at night with its B727 combi aircraft on the following routings New York JFK Washington D C IAD Nashville BNA Memphis MEM Dallas Love Field DAL Seattle SEA Portland PDX Dallas Love Field DAL and Denver DEN Dallas Love Field DAL The freight pallets were loaded in the front section of the aircraft by forklift via a large cargo door located on the side of the fuselage aft of the flight deck while passengers boarded and deplaned via the integral air stairs located at the rear underneath the trijet s engines These aircraft could also be quickly changed to fly either all cargo or all passenger operations and Braniff flew the B727QC in both configurations besides operating in a mixed passenger freight combi mode Continental Micronesia Edit An additional U S operator of the Boeing 727 100 Combi was Continental Micronesia known as Air Mike which in 1983 operated mixed passenger freight flights with the aircraft between Honolulu and Guam on its Island Hopper service 4 One such 727 combi service operated by Continental Micronesia was flight 562 which departed Guam every Tuesday at 3 30pm and then arrived in Honolulu at 7 41am the next morning with en route stops being made at such Pacific island destinations as Truk Pohnpei formerly Ponape Kwajalein Majuro and Johnston Island LAN Chile Edit LAN Chile now LATAM Chile was operating Boeing 727 100 combi service between the U S and Latin America three times a week in 1970 with service from New York City John F Kennedy Airport JFK and Miami MIA 5 According to its October 25 1970 system timetable 727 combi routings operated by LAN Chile included New York JFK Miami Cali Colombia Guayaquil Ecuador Lima Peru Santiago Chile Buenos Aires Argentina Montevideo Uruguay as well as New York JFK Miami Panama City Panama Cali Colombia Lima Peru Santiago Chile Buenos Aires Argentina Montevideo Uruguay and New York JFK Miami Panama City Panama Guayaquil Ecuador Lima Peru Santiago Chile Buenos Aires Argentina Royal Brunei Airlines Edit In 1983 Asian operator Royal Brunei Airlines operated nonstop combi service with the Boeing 737 200QC between its home base of Bandar Seri Begawan in Brunei and Bangkok Hong Kong and Singapore 6 KLM Edit KLM Royal Dutch Airlines is a long time combi user According to the May 15 1971 KLM system timetable the airline operated Douglas DC 8 combi jetliners in mixed passenger freight services between its hub located at the Amsterdam Schiphol Airport AMS and the following destinations Amman Anchorage Bangkok Brazzaville Chicago O Hare Airport Houston Intercontinental Airport Jakarta Johannesburg Kuala Lumpur Mexico City Montreal New York City JFK Airport Singapore Teheran Tokyo Tripoli and Zurich 7 KLM s DC 8 combi aircraft featured all coach service with no first class cabin KLM retired its last 747 400M in 2020 Air France and Lufthansa Edit Other European airlines operating combi aircraft in the past included Air France and Lufthansa which both operated Boeing 747 combis According to the Official Airline Guide OAG during the early 1980s Air France flew 747 combi service between France and destinations in Africa Asia Canada Mexico the Mideast South America and the U S including Anchorage Chicago O Hare Airport Houston Intercontinental Airport and Los Angeles while Lufthansa operated 747 combis between Germany and destinations in Africa Asia Australia the Mideast South America and the U S including Anchorage Boston Dallas Fort Worth Los Angeles New York JFK Airport Philadelphia San Francisco and San Juan 8 In both cases Anchorage was used as a technical stop by the Air France and Lufthansa combi services on the polar route between Europe and Japan Other combi aircraft operators Edit A number of other airlines also flew Boeing 747 combis during the 1980s including Air Canada Air Gabon Air India Boeing 747 300 combi version Alitalia Avianca CAAC Airlines Cameroon Airlines China Airlines El Al Iberia Airlines Iraqi Airways Pakistan International Airlines Qantas Royal Jordanian Airlines Sabena EVA AIR South African Airways Swissair UTA and Varig 9 Air Canada also earlier operated Douglas DC 8 combi aircraft In addition Sabena was operating McDonnell Douglas DC 10 30 combis at this time as well 10 There was also a combi version of the successor to the DC 10 being the McDonnell Douglas MD 11C which was operated by Alitalia Uganda Airlines operated Boeing 707 combi aircraft During the early 1990s Garuda Indonesia Airlines was operating Boeing 747 combis between Jakarta and Los Angeles via Honolulu 11 Alaska Airlines also flew the 737 400 combi on a multi stop milk run route from Anchorage to Ketchikan to Wrangell to Petersburg to Seattle and then back to Anchorage as well as on other routes in Alaska A South African Airways 747 200M combi aircraft that crashed in 1987 as South African Airways Flight 295 Some now defunct airlines from embattled nations flew combi aircraft Air Rhodesia had a Boeing 720 combi that it operated when Rhodesia was a nation acquired in 1967 and flown till shortly after the dissolution of the nation and state airline It was sold to South African Airways which because of the apartheid regime flew a number of combi aircraft 12 One of the most infamous of these was the South African Airways Flight 295 a Boeing 747 combi named Helderberg which was a scheduled commercial flight from Taiwan to South Africa that suffered a catastrophic in flight fire in the cargo area and crashed into the Indian Ocean east of Mauritius on 28 November 1987 killing everyone on board 13 Air Vietnam the official state airline of South Vietnam possessed at least one Boeing 727 100 combi that it had obtained from Continental Air Services CASI a subsidiary airline of Continental Airlines set up to provide operations and airlift support in Southeast Asia in the mid 1960s Under this agreement CASI would share passengers and cargo routes with Air Vietnam on certain domestic and international routes 14 During the Fall of Saigon it was destroyed during shelling of Tan Son Nhat International Airport 15 Two airlines based in Iceland also operated combi aircraft Icelandair flying Boeing 727 100 and Boeing 737 200 combis and Eagle Air Iceland flying Boeing 737 200 combis 16 Both air carriers operated their Boeing combi jets on flights between Iceland and western Europe Air Marshall Islands was a somewhat exotic combi aircraft operator flying a Douglas DC 8 62CF jetliner in mixed passenger freight operations According to the Official Airline Guide OAG Air Marshall Islands was operating a DC 8 combi on scheduled services linking Honolulu with the Pacific islands of Kwajalein and Majuro during the early 1990s 17 Air Marshall Islands is still currently in existence flying regional turboprops but no longer operates combi jet aircraft Alaska Airlines was a long time combi operator flying various Boeing jet models in combi configuration see below There were several other combi aircraft operators as well in Alaska in the past including MarkAir with Boeing 737 200s and de Havilland Canada DHC 7 Dash 7s Reeve Aleutian Airways with Boeing 727 100 jets and Lockheed L 188 Electra turboprops Western Airlines with Lockheed L 188 Electras and Wien Air Alaska with Boeing 737 200s and Fairchild F 27B turboprops Wien was the launch customer for the combi version of the B737 200 while Wien predecessor Northern Consolidated Airlines was the first operator of the Fairchild F 27B which was combi version of the Fairchild Hiller FH 227 A number of airlines in Canada also flew combi aircraft besides Air Canada and its Douglas DC 8 and Boeing 747 combi services including First Air with Boeing 727 100 and 727 200 jetliners in addition to Hawker Siddeley HS 748 turboprops First Air continues to operate combi aircraft at the present time including Boeing 737 200 and 737 400 jetliners as well as the ATR 42 turboprop 18 Two other current combi operators in Canada are Air North operating the Boeing 737 200 jet and Hawker Siddeley HS 748 turboprop and Canadian North flying Boeing 737 200 jets and de Havilland Canada DHC 8 100 Dash 8 turboprop aircraft Other combi operators in Canada in the past included CP Air and Pacific Western with both airlines flying Boeing 727 100 and Boeing 737 200 combi aircraft as well as Nordair operating Boeing 737 200 combi aircraft In 2008 Aviation Traders designed a Boeing 757 200 combi aircraft leased from Astraeus Airlines for the heavy metal band Iron Maiden 19 The front of the aircraft was configured for passengers with the rear holding six tonnes of cargo consisting of Iron Maiden s equipment for their tour The band supported their most recent when tour with a Boeing 747 400 leased from Air Atlanta Icelandic Conversions Edit Nowadays when many airlines have converted their combis into full passenger service or full freighter service for the potential of more profitable operations citation needed Alaska Airlines combi service Edit Alaska Airlines operated converted narrow body Boeing 737 400 combis that were previously flown in full passenger configuration 20 According to the Alaska Airlines website the airline was operating several Boeing 737 400 combi aircraft with each jetliner configured with 72 passenger seats in the coach compartment The airline then announced the retirement of these aircraft with the last combi flight scheduled for October 18 2017 21 On that date Alaska Airlines flight 66 was the airline s last scheduled combi flight with the Boeing 737 400 N764AS operating a routing of Anchorage ANC Cordova CDV Yakutat YAK Juneau JNU Seattle SEA 22 The 737 400 aircraft replaced Boeing 737 200 combis that were formerly operated by Alaska Airlines which was the only major U S air carrier still flying scheduled combi operations domestically with service between Seattle and Alaska and also between Anchorage Fairbanks and remote destinations in Alaska 23 Alaska Airlines previously operated Boeing 727 100C aircraft which were also capable of combi operations 24 and has now added Boeing 737 700 freighter all cargo aircraft to its fleet which have replaced its Boeing 737 400 combi aircraft 25 Notable combi passenger aircraft EditATR 42 300 Boeing 707 320C Boeing 727 100C including the B727 100QC Quick Change model Boeing 727 200 formerly operated by First Air in Canada Boeing 737 200C including the B737 200QC Quick Change model Boeing 737 400C Boeing 737 700C Boeing 747 200M Boeing 747 300M Boeing 747 400M Boeing 757 200 Convair CV 240 de Havilland Canada DHC 7 Dash 7 de Havilland Canada DHC 8 100 and Q400 Dash 8 Douglas DC 7C Douglas DC 8CF Fairchild F 27B Hawker Siddeley HS 748 Lockheed L 188 Electra McDonnell Douglas DC 10 30 Combi McDonnell Douglas MD 11 CombiSee also Edit Aviation portalPreighter Bruck Combine carReferences Edit http www timetableimages com Northwest Airlines March 1 1963 system timetable pages 8 amp 14 http www timetableimages com March 1 1966 Northwest Airlines system timetable http www timetableimages com Braniff International July 1 1968 system timetable page 30 http www departedflights com July 1 1983 Worldwide Edition Official Airline Guide OAG Guam amp Honolulu flight schedules for Continental Micronesia http www timetableimages com Oct 25 1970 LAN Chile system timetable http www departedflights com July 1 1983 Worldwide Edition Official Airline Guide OAG Bandar Seri Begawan flight schedules http www timetableimages com May 15 1971 KLM system timetable Freight Services http www departedflights com July 1 1983 Official Airline Guide OAG Worldwide Edition Frankfurt amp Paris flight schedules http www departedflights com July 1 1983 amp Jan 9 1989 Official Airline Guide OAG Worldwide Editions http www departedflights com July 1 1983 Official Airline Guide OAG Worldwide Edition Oct 1 1993 OAG Desktop Flight Guide Worldwide Edition Airline History From 1996 Sky Host 11 April 1996 Retrieved 11 December 2011 Cheney Daniel I 2010 Lessons Learned from Transport Airplane Accidents PDF Sixth Triennial International Fire and Cabin Safety Research Conference Atlantic City Federal Aviation Administration World Airline Directory Flight International 10 April 1969 557 Accounts of Operation Frequent Wind can be found in Spencer s v FREQUENT WIND Operation Todd 346 387 and Isaacs http www departedflights com July 1 1983 Official Airline Guide OAG Reykjavik Keflavik International Airport flight schedules Official Airline Guide October 1993 edition flight schedules for Kwajalein KWA and Majuro MAJ Home firstair ca Our Work Iron Maiden Boeing 757 Cabin Configuration Boeing 737 400 Combi Aircraft Information Alaska Air Cargo introduces world s first converted 737 700 freighter 26 September 2017 http www flightaware com N764AS http www alaskaair com Flight Information Downloadable Timetables http www airliners net photos of Alaska Airlines Boeing 727 100C aircraft Cargo freighter service Alaska Airlines Cargo Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Combi aircraft amp oldid 1115687224, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.