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SAHSA

Servicio Aéreo de Honduras S.A. (IATA: SHICAO: SHA) otherwise known as SAHSA Airlines was the national flag carrier airline of Honduras from October 22, 1945, to January 14, 1994. The airline was a subsidiary of Pan American Airways and merged with Transportes Aéreos Nacionales (TAN) to form TAN-SAHSA in November 1991.

Servicio Aéreo de Honduras (SAHSA)
IATA ICAO Callsign
SH SHA SAHSA
Founded1945
Ceased operations1994
HubsToncontín International Airport
Secondary hubsRamón Villeda Morales International Airport
Focus citiesTegucigalpa, San Pedro Sula, Managua, New Orleans
AllianceTan-Sahsa
Fleet size41
Destinations40 destinations: Central America, North America, South America & the Caribbean
Parent companyPan American Airways
HeadquartersTegucigalpa, Honduras
Key peopleOswaldo López Arellano

History edit

 
Sahsa Airlines pilots

SAHSA was founded on January 2, 1945, with help from Pan American Airways under the name Servicio Aéreo de Honduras S.A. (SAHSA). Pan American Airways owned 40%, the Honduran government owned 40% and 20% was owned by private investors.

 
SAHSA Lockheed L-188 Electra combi aircraft operating a mixed passenger-freight schedule at Miami International Airport in July 1976

The airline began operations on October 22, 1945, using a Douglas DC-2 (XH-SAA) to fly to destinations within Honduras. By October 1945, SAHSA had also acquired a Douglas DC-3 and a Beechcraft Model 18. In 1953, SAHSA acquired rival airline TACA de Honduras, by which time SAHSA was operating the Douglas DC-2, Douglas DC-3, and Curtis C-46 Commando.

Equipment with modern pressurised airliners began in the mid-1960s with the Convair 340, Convair 440 and Douglas DC-6B being added to the fleet. The turboprop Lockheed L-188 Electra joined the company in 1969.[1]

In 1970, Pan Am gave up its stake in SAHSA and TAN took over, but SAHSA continued to operate independently. TAN acquired the first jet airliner in Honduras, a Boeing 737-200, in 1974, and started international operations between Miami and Honduras. SAHSA acquired a Boeing 737-200 in October 1974 and later acquired Boeing 727-200s. SAHSA began operations between Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Belize and New Orleans.

The owner of TAN-SAHSA, Oswaldo López Arellano, was a two-term president of Honduras. To keep business in Honduras, no U.S. airlines were given permission fly to or from Honduras. Once Arellano was thrown out of power, several U.S. based airlines, such as Eastern Airlines, Pan Am and Air Florida, were allowed to operate to and from Honduras.

SAHSA and TAN merged into TAN-SAHSA on 1 November 1991. It was based at Toncontín International Airport in Tegucigalpa and flew from Honduras to various destinations throughout Central and North and South America. The TAN-SAHSA name was used between 1990 and 1991 when the name TAN disappeared. The airline continued to operate as SAHSA until its demise in 1994. The collapse was partly due to corruption and partly to the airline's poor safety record. The airline experienced several accidents during its operational life, including a major crash of a 727 in 1989 in Honduras, killing 131 of 146 passengers aboard, and a subsequent emergency landing incident on a Houston-bound 737 plane in 1993, after which the airline lost its FAA Air Operations Certificate and with it its operating privileges to the United States. No longer able to fly to the United States, financial pressures caused the airline to cease flight operations in late 1993 and it was disbanded in January 1994. Following the collapse of SAHSA, Honduras had no national airline until 2002, when Sol Air commenced operations.

Destinations edit

SAHSA was initially established as a national airline to operate domestic flights with aircraft such as the Douglas DC-2 and Douglas DC-3. Initial routes were limited to Tegucigalpa, San Pedro Sula, Puerto Cortés, La Ceiba, Marcala, Intibucá, Santa Rosa de Copán, Ocotepeque and Santa Bárbara.

The first U.S. route operated by SAHSA was to New Orleans in 1974 with Lockheed L-188 Electra propjet service being flown on a daily route of New Orleans-Belize-San Pedro Sula-Tegucigalpa with continuing service three days a week being operated to San Jose, Costa Rica by this Electra flight.[2]

Following the acquisition of Boeing jet aircraft in the mid 1970s, the airline expanded its international routes. In addition to New Orleans, Belize, Guatemala City and San Jose, CR, new destinations included Houston, Miami, Grand Cayman, Managua, Guatemala City, San Salvador, Panamá, Colombia and Perú.

Known Destinations edit

Domestic

Comayagua - Comayagua International Airport

Erandique - Erandique Airport

Gracias - Gracias Airport

La Ceiba - Golosón International Airport

La Esperanza - La Esperanza Airport (Intibucá)

Marcala - Marcala Airport

Ocotepeque - Ocotepeque Airport

Puerto Cortes - Puerto Cortes Airport

Roatan - Juan Manuel Gálvez International Airport

Santa Bárbara - Santa Bárbara Airport

San Pedro Sula - Ramón Villeda Morales International Airport - Secondary Hub

Santa Rosa de Copán - Santa Rosa de Copán Airport

Tegucigalpa - Toncontín International Airport - Hub

International edit

Belize

Belize City - Philip S. W. Goldson International Airport

Colombia

Bogota -El Dorado International Airport

San Andrés - Gustavo Rojas Pinilla International Airport

Costa Rica

San José - Juan Santamaría International Airport

Guatemala

Guatemala City - La Aurora International Airport

Nicaragua

Managua - Augusto C. Sandino International Airport

Panama

Panama City - Tocumen International Airport

United States

Houston - George Bush Intercontinental Airport

Miami - Miami International Airport

New Orleans - Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport

Fleet edit

SAHSA's fleet consisted of the following aircraft:

Aircraft Total Routes
Boeing 727-100 4 short and medium haul
Boeing 727-200 2 short and medium haul
Boeing 737-200 6 short and medium haul
Boeing 737-400 2 medium haul
CV-340 2 short haul
CV-440 2 short haul
CV-580 2 short haul
Douglas DC-3 10 short haul
Lockheed L-188 Electra 4 short and medium haul

Previously operated edit

The airline also operated:

Accidents and incidents edit

Sahsa Airlines was involved in several incidents and accidents, the most notable being:

  • On 7 June 1962, a SAHSA Curtiss C-46 Commando (HR-SAL); a cargo flight, crash landed at Toncontin when the left side undercarriage strut collapsed on touchdown. Both crew members survived but the aircraft was damaged beyond repair.[3]
  • On 20 February 1967, SAHSA Flight 203, a Douglas DC-6 (HR-SAS) had an accident at Toncontin International Airport because of a reverse prop system failure, during forced braking two main gear tires caught fire, the plane overran the runway and caught fire killing 4 passengers.[4]
  • On 13 September 1969, a SAHSA Douglas DC-3 was hijacked at Comalapa International Airport. The hijacking lasted less than one day and there were no fatalities.[5]
  • On 25 November 1969, a SAHSA Douglas DC-3 (HR-ANA) crashed whilst attempting to land on runway 01 at Toncontin. Strong gusts of wind upset the aircraft attitude during its flare which pushed the aircraft towards the terminal buildings. The crew forced a turn away from the buildings and crashed. All 15 passengers and 3 crew survived.[3]
  • On 28 May 1980, a SAHSA Douglas DC-3 (HR-SAC) was damaged beyond repair when part of its landing gear struck a wall whilst on approach to Utila Airport in Honduras.[5]
  • On 8 January 1981, a Lockheed L-188 Electra (HR-SAW) crashed at Guatemala City whilst on a ferry flight to Tegucigalpa for repairs, the plane took off with only three engines and one of the electrical generators malfunctioning, shortly after take off the plane lost hydraulic pressure and tried return to La Aurora International Airport, but the plane lost altitude and crashed into some houses 1 mile west of the airport, killing the 6 crew members on board.[6]
  • On 27 March 1981, a SAHSA Boeing 737-200 was hijacked in Panama by terrorists demanding the release of prisoners. The hijackers surrendered after 2 days. There were no fatalities.[5]
  • On 21 October 1989, Tan-Sahsa Flight 414 a Boeing 727-200 (N88705) crashed at the "Cerro de Hula" mountain ridge after an unsuccessful approach, killing 127 people.[7]
  • On 18 March 1990, a SAHSA Douglas DC-3 (HR-SAZ) overran the runway on landing at Juan Manuel Gálvez International Airport, Roatán and ended up in the sea. The aircraft, performing a domestic scheduled passenger flight, was damaged beyond repair but all 32 people on board escaped.[8]
  • On 17 November 1991, a SAHSA Boeing 737-200 landed hard on the right main gear strut at Juan Santamaria International Airport casing the right landing gear strut to collapse. All 36 passengers and 6 crew escaped.[5]
  • On 18 July 1993, a SAHSA Boeing 737-200 was damaged beyond repair during a hard landing at Managua Airport in Nicaragua the aircraft skidded to the right, off the runway. The nosegear collapsed and both engines were torn off. The aircraft came to rest 200 feet right of the runway.[5]

Bibliography edit

  • Sherlock, Jay. L (1977). Lockheed L-188 Electra and Orion. Air-Britain (Historians) Ltd. ISBN 0-85130-058-8.

References edit

  1. ^ Sherlock, 1977, p. 23
  2. ^ http://www.timetableimages.com, June 1, 1974 SAHSA system timetable
  3. ^ a b "Tegucigalpa-Toncontin Airport profile - Aviation Safety Network".
  4. ^ http://aviation-safety.net/Accident and incidents reportdatabase/record.php?id=19670220-0
  5. ^ a b c d e "Aviation Safety Network > ASN Aviation Safety Database > Operator index > Honduras > SAHSA - Servicio Aéreo de Honduras SA".
  6. ^ "ASN Aircraft accident Lockheed L-188A Electra HR-SAW Guatemala City-La Aurora Airport (GUA)".
  7. ^ "ASN Aircraft accident Boeing 727-224 N88705 Tegucigalpa-Toncontin Airport (TGU)".
  8. ^ "HR-SAZ Accident description". Aviation Safety Network. Retrieved 24 June 2010.

External links edit

  • Code and fleet data[permanent dead link]
  • Accident and incidents report
  • Airliners.net picture
  • Short history and pictures

sahsa, 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, 2013, lea. 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 SAHSA news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Servicio Aereo de Honduras S A IATA SH ICAO SHA otherwise known as SAHSA Airlines was the national flag carrier airline of Honduras from October 22 1945 to January 14 1994 The airline was a subsidiary of Pan American Airways and merged with Transportes Aereos Nacionales TAN to form TAN SAHSA in November 1991 Servicio Aereo de Honduras SAHSA IATA ICAO CallsignSH SHA SAHSAFounded1945Ceased operations1994HubsToncontin International AirportSecondary hubsRamon Villeda Morales International AirportFocus citiesTegucigalpa San Pedro Sula Managua New OrleansAllianceTan SahsaFleet size41Destinations40 destinations Central America North America South America amp the CaribbeanParent companyPan American AirwaysHeadquartersTegucigalpa HondurasKey peopleOswaldo Lopez Arellano Contents 1 History 2 Destinations 2 1 Known Destinations 2 2 International 3 Fleet 3 1 Previously operated 4 Accidents and incidents 5 Bibliography 6 References 7 External linksHistory edit nbsp Sahsa Airlines pilotsSAHSA was founded on January 2 1945 with help from Pan American Airways under the name Servicio Aereo de Honduras S A SAHSA Pan American Airways owned 40 the Honduran government owned 40 and 20 was owned by private investors nbsp SAHSA Lockheed L 188 Electra combi aircraft operating a mixed passenger freight schedule at Miami International Airport in July 1976The airline began operations on October 22 1945 using a Douglas DC 2 XH SAA to fly to destinations within Honduras By October 1945 SAHSA had also acquired a Douglas DC 3 and a Beechcraft Model 18 In 1953 SAHSA acquired rival airline TACA de Honduras by which time SAHSA was operating the Douglas DC 2 Douglas DC 3 and Curtis C 46 Commando Equipment with modern pressurised airliners began in the mid 1960s with the Convair 340 Convair 440 and Douglas DC 6B being added to the fleet The turboprop Lockheed L 188 Electra joined the company in 1969 1 In 1970 Pan Am gave up its stake in SAHSA and TAN took over but SAHSA continued to operate independently TAN acquired the first jet airliner in Honduras a Boeing 737 200 in 1974 and started international operations between Miami and Honduras SAHSA acquired a Boeing 737 200 in October 1974 and later acquired Boeing 727 200s SAHSA began operations between Costa Rica Nicaragua Belize and New Orleans The owner of TAN SAHSA Oswaldo Lopez Arellano was a two term president of Honduras To keep business in Honduras no U S airlines were given permission fly to or from Honduras Once Arellano was thrown out of power several U S based airlines such as Eastern Airlines Pan Am and Air Florida were allowed to operate to and from Honduras SAHSA and TAN merged into TAN SAHSA on 1 November 1991 It was based at Toncontin International Airport in Tegucigalpa and flew from Honduras to various destinations throughout Central and North and South America The TAN SAHSA name was used between 1990 and 1991 when the name TAN disappeared The airline continued to operate as SAHSA until its demise in 1994 The collapse was partly due to corruption and partly to the airline s poor safety record The airline experienced several accidents during its operational life including a major crash of a 727 in 1989 in Honduras killing 131 of 146 passengers aboard and a subsequent emergency landing incident on a Houston bound 737 plane in 1993 after which the airline lost its FAA Air Operations Certificate and with it its operating privileges to the United States No longer able to fly to the United States financial pressures caused the airline to cease flight operations in late 1993 and it was disbanded in January 1994 Following the collapse of SAHSA Honduras had no national airline until 2002 when Sol Air commenced operations Destinations editSAHSA was initially established as a national airline to operate domestic flights with aircraft such as the Douglas DC 2 and Douglas DC 3 Initial routes were limited to Tegucigalpa San Pedro Sula Puerto Cortes La Ceiba Marcala Intibuca Santa Rosa de Copan Ocotepeque and Santa Barbara The first U S route operated by SAHSA was to New Orleans in 1974 with Lockheed L 188 Electra propjet service being flown on a daily route of New Orleans Belize San Pedro Sula Tegucigalpa with continuing service three days a week being operated to San Jose Costa Rica by this Electra flight 2 Following the acquisition of Boeing jet aircraft in the mid 1970s the airline expanded its international routes In addition to New Orleans Belize Guatemala City and San Jose CR new destinations included Houston Miami Grand Cayman Managua Guatemala City San Salvador Panama Colombia and Peru Known Destinations edit DomesticComayagua Comayagua International AirportErandique Erandique AirportGracias Gracias AirportLa Ceiba Goloson International AirportLa Esperanza La Esperanza Airport Intibuca Marcala Marcala AirportOcotepeque Ocotepeque AirportPuerto Cortes Puerto Cortes AirportRoatan Juan Manuel Galvez International AirportSanta Barbara Santa Barbara AirportSan Pedro Sula Ramon Villeda Morales International Airport Secondary HubSanta Rosa de Copan Santa Rosa de Copan AirportTegucigalpa Toncontin International Airport Hub International edit BelizeBelize City Philip S W Goldson International AirportColombiaBogota El Dorado International AirportSan Andres Gustavo Rojas Pinilla International AirportCosta RicaSan Jose Juan Santamaria International AirportGuatemalaGuatemala City La Aurora International AirportNicaraguaManagua Augusto C Sandino International AirportPanamaPanama City Tocumen International AirportUnited StatesHouston George Bush Intercontinental AirportMiami Miami International AirportNew Orleans Louis Armstrong New Orleans International AirportFleet editSAHSA s fleet consisted of the following aircraft Aircraft Total RoutesBoeing 727 100 4 short and medium haulBoeing 727 200 2 short and medium haulBoeing 737 200 6 short and medium haulBoeing 737 400 2 medium haulCV 340 2 short haulCV 440 2 short haulCV 580 2 short haulDouglas DC 3 10 short haulLockheed L 188 Electra 4 short and medium haulPreviously operated edit The airline also operated Douglas DC 2 Douglas DC 6 Curtiss C 46 Commando de Havilland Canada DHC 7 Dash 7Accidents and incidents editSahsa Airlines was involved in several incidents and accidents the most notable being On 7 June 1962 a SAHSA Curtiss C 46 Commando HR SAL a cargo flight crash landed at Toncontin when the left side undercarriage strut collapsed on touchdown Both crew members survived but the aircraft was damaged beyond repair 3 On 20 February 1967 SAHSA Flight 203 a Douglas DC 6 HR SAS had an accident at Toncontin International Airport because of a reverse prop system failure during forced braking two main gear tires caught fire the plane overran the runway and caught fire killing 4 passengers 4 On 13 September 1969 a SAHSA Douglas DC 3 was hijacked at Comalapa International Airport The hijacking lasted less than one day and there were no fatalities 5 On 25 November 1969 a SAHSA Douglas DC 3 HR ANA crashed whilst attempting to land on runway 01 at Toncontin Strong gusts of wind upset the aircraft attitude during its flare which pushed the aircraft towards the terminal buildings The crew forced a turn away from the buildings and crashed All 15 passengers and 3 crew survived 3 On 28 May 1980 a SAHSA Douglas DC 3 HR SAC was damaged beyond repair when part of its landing gear struck a wall whilst on approach to Utila Airport in Honduras 5 On 8 January 1981 a Lockheed L 188 Electra HR SAW crashed at Guatemala City whilst on a ferry flight to Tegucigalpa for repairs the plane took off with only three engines and one of the electrical generators malfunctioning shortly after take off the plane lost hydraulic pressure and tried return to La Aurora International Airport but the plane lost altitude and crashed into some houses 1 mile west of the airport killing the 6 crew members on board 6 On 27 March 1981 a SAHSA Boeing 737 200 was hijacked in Panama by terrorists demanding the release of prisoners The hijackers surrendered after 2 days There were no fatalities 5 On 21 October 1989 Tan Sahsa Flight 414 a Boeing 727 200 N88705 crashed at the Cerro de Hula mountain ridge after an unsuccessful approach killing 127 people 7 On 18 March 1990 a SAHSA Douglas DC 3 HR SAZ overran the runway on landing at Juan Manuel Galvez International Airport Roatan and ended up in the sea The aircraft performing a domestic scheduled passenger flight was damaged beyond repair but all 32 people on board escaped 8 On 17 November 1991 a SAHSA Boeing 737 200 landed hard on the right main gear strut at Juan Santamaria International Airport casing the right landing gear strut to collapse All 36 passengers and 6 crew escaped 5 On 18 July 1993 a SAHSA Boeing 737 200 was damaged beyond repair during a hard landing at Managua Airport in Nicaragua the aircraft skidded to the right off the runway The nosegear collapsed and both engines were torn off The aircraft came to rest 200 feet right of the runway 5 Bibliography editSherlock Jay L 1977 Lockheed L 188 Electra and Orion Air Britain Historians Ltd ISBN 0 85130 058 8 References edit Sherlock 1977 p 23 http www timetableimages com June 1 1974 SAHSA system timetable a b Tegucigalpa Toncontin Airport profile Aviation Safety Network http aviation safety net Accident and incidents reportdatabase record php id 19670220 0 a b c d e Aviation Safety Network gt ASN Aviation Safety Database gt Operator index gt Honduras gt SAHSA Servicio Aereo de Honduras SA ASN Aircraft accident Lockheed L 188A Electra HR SAW Guatemala City La Aurora Airport GUA ASN Aircraft accident Boeing 727 224 N88705 Tegucigalpa Toncontin Airport TGU HR SAZ Accident description Aviation Safety Network Retrieved 24 June 2010 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to SAHSA Code and fleet data permanent dead link Accident and incidents report Airliners net picture Short history and picturesPortals nbsp Companies nbsp Aviation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title SAHSA amp oldid 1152477642, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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