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Talair

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 58.6.206.160 (talk) at 23:12, 2 August 2018 (In the late 1970's, Talair introduced the Twin Otter [DHC-6] and the Embraer EMB110, however the EMB120 was never in service with Territory Airlines. Flight West Airlines was the first in the Pacific Region to operate the EMB120). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Talair
Talair de Havilland Canada DHC-8-100 (P2-GVA) at Jackson International Airport
IATA ICAO Callsign
GV TAL TALAIR
Founded1952
Ceased operations1993
Operating basesPapua New Guinea

TALAIR was a Papua New Guinea airline founded in 1952. It ceased operations in 1993.

Company history

Talair had its origins as Territory Airlines, founded in 1952 as a charter company. It operated to towns throughout the country where the only means of communication was by air. Its bases of operations were Lae and Madang. The aircraft used were small Cessna and Beechcraft types.

Territory Airlines was granted scheduled flight rights in 1968 from Goroka. Soon it was serving over 50 destinations in the territory. In 1971 it took over Sepik Air Charters and in 1975 took over MAC Air Charter and now the destinations grew to over 100.

The need to fly to all types of destinations forced Territory Airlines to have a very varied fleet, but the mainstay of the fleet were the Britten-Norman Islander and the DHC-6 Twin Otter.

In 1975 the name was changed to Talair Tourist Airlines of Niugini and soon it took over Panda Air and the network grew to over 150 destinations. In the late 70's the DeHavilland Canada Twin Otters [DHC-6]and then the Embraer EMB110 aircraft were introduced to Papua New Guinea. In 1986 the DHC-8 was placed into service. By 1990 the fleet had grown to over 50 aircraft but the operating costs of keeping such a varied fleet flying resulted in a reduction of flights. With financial difficulties mounting, on May 25, 1993 TALAIR ceased all flights and the aircraft were transferred to Flight West Airlines of Australia.[1]

Fleet details

TALAIR operated many different types of aircraft many of which are not listed here.

External links

References

  1. ^ Airlines Remembered by BI Hengi, Publisher Midland Publishing