'Ameriflight' is an
American cargo airline based in
Burbank,
California,
USA. It is the largest United States
FAA Part 135 cargo carrier, operating scheduled and contract cargo services to destinations in 30 US states,
Canada,
Mexico, and the
Caribbean. Ameriflight serves major financial institutions, freight forwarders, laboratories and overnight couriers in the western USA and provides feeder services for overnight express carriers nationwide.
[1]
The majority of Ameriflight's flying consists of "air feeder" service for major package express integrators such as UPS, DHL, and FedEx. On schedules set by the customers, cargo is received in the early morning from large jet freighters at hub airports and distributed by Ameriflight airplanes to smaller communities whose traffic (or airports) wouldn't support the big airplanes. In the evening, the Ameriflight aircraft fly inbound to the hubs with cargo to be transferred to the big jet freighters, which carry it onward to the integrators' distribution centers for sorting and redistribution to the ultimate destinations.
Although demand is decreasing as use of digital imaging and electronic data transfer increases, the company also transports high priority intercity financial documents. Pharmaceuticals, film for development, medical laboratory samples, and other miscellaneous cargo are also carried.
The
Cincinnati-Northern Kentucky International Airport (CVG) base is unique to Ameriflight as a large part of their business is last-minute on-demand auto parts and other time critical parts needed to keep assembly lines moving. CVG has also been growing Ameriflight's time-critical radioactive medical raw materials business.
The company also conducts on-demand passenger charter operations using three Learjet 35As and a Beechcraft King Air 200.
History
The airline was established and started operations in
1968 as California Air Charter, and was merged in
1971 with United Couriers (UCI), a wholly owned subsidiary of ATI Systems International (ATIS). In April
1993 the fixed-wing division of Wings Express of
Van Nuys was purchased and the outstanding shares of Sports Air Travel were purchased in mid-
1997. In March 2007, When Canadian company Guarda bought ATIS, Ameriflight was sold to a group of investors including the company's president, Gary Richards. Ameriflight and has 618 employees.
Main Bases and Hubs
As of March
2007,
Ameriflight's headquarters is Burbank
Bob Hope Airport, with hubs at:
★ Burbank
Bob Hope Airport (BUR)
★
Ontario International Airport (ONT)
★
San Juan, Puerto Rico Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport (SJU)
★
Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport (DFW)
★
Billings Logan International Airport (BIL)
★
Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport (PHX)
★
Salt Lake City International Airport (SLC)
★
Seattle Boeing Field (BFI)
★
Oakland International Airport (OAK)
★
Cincinnati-Northern Kentucky International Airport (CVG)
★
Portland International Airport (PDX)
Fleet
The Ameriflight fleet includes the following aircraft (as of March 2007):
[2]
All aircraft are "straight freighters" except for the
King Air 200, and three Learjet 35As, which are passenger-configured.
★ 7
Embraer EMB 120ER Brasilia
★
★ (All EMB-120s in the fleet that were built as 120RTs have been modified to 120ER status)
★ 19
Fairchild Merlin IV-C
★
★ (Merlin IVCs include 17 "Expediter" factory-built freighters)
★ 24
Fairchild Metro III
★ 20
Raytheon Beechcraft 1900C Airliner
★ 12
Raytheon Beech B99
★ 45
Raytheon Beech C99
★
★ ("B99" aircraft include 3 built as B99s; others are 99 and 99A aircraft modified to B99 status by incorporation of Beech Kit 99-5014)
★
★ (All pre-C99 aircraft incorporate SuperSpar wing mod and Beech hydro landing gear)
★ 5
Bombardier Learjet 35A
★ 1
Raytheon Beech King Air 200
★ 41
Piper Chieftain/Navajo
Previously operated:
★
Cessna 402 (phased out)
★
Piper Lance (phased out)
Accidents and Incidents
★
November 16,
1994: A
Beechcraft Model 99 flying between
Burbank, CA-
Oakland, CA crashed near
Avenal, CA during an uncontrolled descent. The pilot, who was the only person onboard, was killed.
[1]
★
February 12,
1999: A
Beechcraft Model 99 operating between
Tonopah, NV-
Bishop, CA crashed about 18.1 miles NE of the
Bishop Airport in the vicinity of the
Inyo National Forest. The plane was found the next day along a valley close to
White Mountain inside the forest. The pilot was killed. The cause of the crash was determined to be the failure of the pilot to follow proper procedures.
[2]
★
November 29,
2003: Flight 1966, a
Fairchild Merlin IV-C was flying
Boeing Field-
Spokane when it impacted trees about 3.4 miles from
Felts Field where it was to land. The pilot, who was the lone person onboard was killed. The cause of the crash was determined to be the pilot's failure to maintain proper glidepath alignment during an ILS approach in poor weather.
[3]
★
March 18,
2006: Flight 2591, a
Beechcraft Model 99 was flying the route
Helena, MT-
Butte, MT when it crashed about 8.1 miles SW of Butte. The plane impacted trees and then mountainous terrain, during heavy snow and icing. The wreckage was not located until March 20. Both pilots were killed. The cause of the crash was determined to be the pilot's failure to follow the proper instrument approach procedure.
[4]
External links
★
Ameriflight
★
ATI Systems International
References
1. Directory: World Airlines
2. Airline Pilot Central