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Sunstate Airlines
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Information
IATA Code: -
ICAO Code: -
Known As: Sunstate Airlines
Full Name: Sunstate Airlines
Country: Australia
Callsign: Australian
History:
The company's roots extend back to 1975, when Noosa Air began operating
in December of that year between Maryborough and Brisbane using a
Britten-Norman Islander.
Maryborough businessman Bevan Whitaker,owner of the parent company of
Noosa Air, Whitaker Pty. Ltd., set up a second airline that commenced
operations in December 1981, serving intrastate routes in Queensland
vacated by Trans Australia Airlines (TAA) with Embraer EMB 110
Bandeirante aircraft.
This second airline was called Sunstate.
Originally the two airlines used separate Airline codes, but in 1983
Sunstate changed its code to that of Noosa Air.
By the end of that year the two airlines had merged fully; from 1
January 1984 all flights were conducted under the Sunstate name as part
of TAA's Queensland network.
The combined and diverse fleet at that point consisted of two
Islanders, two Bandeirantes, three de Havilland Canada DHC-6 Twin
Otters and a Short 330; within a few months the Islanders and the Short
330 were replaced by a GAF N.24A Nomad and a Short 360,with the
Islanders going to associated company Whitaker Air Services.
In 1986 Sunstate purchased a share in a Victorian airline.
Mildura-based Murray Valley Airlines (MVA) was also established in 1975
but ceased operations in October 1986 due to financial problems.
Operations recommenced on 9 November 1986 as Sunstate Airlines
(Mildura) on the old MVA routes from Mildura to Melbourne, to Adelaide
via Renmark, South Australia, and to Broken Hill, New South Wales.The
airline now had two unconnected networks.
The following year Sunstate expanded in its original territory when
financially-troubled Air Queensland gave up its routes in South-East
Queensland; Sunstate took over these routes on 1 June.
The airline had prepared for the route handover by acquiring more
aircraft, its fleet by then consisted of four Nomads (two N24As and two
N.22s), three Bandeirantes, three Twin Otters, two Short 360s and a
Short 330 in Queensland; and a Short 360 and Cessna 404 in Victoria.
In 1989 Australian Airlines, the successor to TAA and previously the
owner of now-defunct Air Queensland, took a one-third share in Sunstate.
Shortly afterwards Sunstate commenced operations out of Cairns and the
fleet was somewhat rationalised, now consisting of three Short 360s,
two Short 330s, two Twin Otters, and a Bandeirante transferred from the
Mildura operation.
Meanwhile Sunstate Airlines (Mildura) was awarded a five-year contract
to operate air ambulance flights on behalf of the Ambulance services of
Victoria; to serve the contract it took a Cessna 404 the Queensland
operation had acquired from the break-up of Air Queensland, its own
Cessna 404, and four others. To maintain its airline operations a
succession of Cessna 404s were leased one at a time from Eastern
Australia Airlines, Australian Airlines' regional subsidiary in New
South Wales.
October 1990 saw Australian Airlines become the outright owner of
Sunstate Airlines and Sunstate Airlines (Mildura). The Mildura
operation was subsequently rebranded as Southern Australia Airlines,
commencing operations under that name on 1 January 1992; the following
month it took delivery of its first pressurised aircraft, a de
Havilland Canada DHC-8-100 Dash 8.
A second Dash 8 was delivered in March 1992 and the Short 360 was
transferred to Sunstate Airlines in July the same year. Southern
Australia used the Dash 8s to expand its services, taking over Eastern
Australia Airlines routes across Bass Strait from Melbourne to
Launceston and Devonport in Tasmania.
Sunstate also took delivery of three Dash 8s and placed them in service
in mid-1992, and took over more routes from Australian Regional
Airlines, another Australian Airlines subsidiary operating in
Queensland that rose after the demise of Air Queensland. It also
commenced operations from Brisbane into New South Wales, flying once a
week to Lord Howe Island from 20 September 1992.
Both Southern Australia and Sunstate also started using Australian
Airlines' 'TN' airline code for all of their services following the
purchase.
On 1 October 1993 Sunstate absorbed Australian Regional Airlines,
taking over its fleet and routes.Before and after the takeover Sunstate
rationalised its fleet, now having the three Dash 8s, four Short 360s
and five Twin Otters.
At the end of that month both Southern Australia and Sunstate
changed airline codes again, now operating with the 'QF' of Qantas
after that airline shut down Australian Airlines on 30 October.
Qantas now found itself with some of the smallest aircraft in the
Australian airline industry (Southern Australia's two Cessna 404s) and
the biggest in the industry (its Boeing 747s and 767s and the former
Australian Airlines Airbus A300s).
Following Australian Airlines' ceasing operations, Southern Australia
commenced flying between Melbourne and Canberra.
In the mid 1990s both Southern Australia and Sunstate expanded
steadily. In 1994 Southern Australia's air ambulance contract was
renewed for another five years, and in December 1996 it took delivery
of two British Aerospace BAe 146s to supplement its three Dash 8s and
two Cessna 404s. It used the BAe 146s to commence operations on trunk
routes from Hobart and Launceston to Sydney, Melbourne and Adelaide.
In 1998 Southern Australia withdrew from the Mildura - Broken
Hill route in July, and from Mildura to Adelaide via Renmark in
October, and the two airline Cessna 404s were taken out of service. The
air ambulance contract and aircraft were taken over by the Royal Flying
Doctor Service of Australia from 1 November that year.
By the end of 1997 Sunstate added another Dash 8 and more Short 360s,
so that it was operating four of the former and eight of the latter,
along with the five Twin Otters, to a network of 21 destinations in
Queensland and New South Wales (including to Newcastle, New South Wales
from May that year).
The following year the Twin Otters and three of the Short 360s were
withdrawn after Qantas sold the portfolio of islands in the Great
Barrier Reef it had inherited from Australian Airlines (Brampton
Island, Dunk Island, Great Keppel Island and Lizard Island); and a
DHC-8-200 was added.
Sunstate Dash 8 Q400 In 2001, both Sunstate and Southern Australia (as
well as Eastern Australia Airlines, Impulse Airlines and National Jet
Systems' Airlink operation) were rebranded as QantasLink, though each
entity retained a certain amount of independence. The Southern
Australia name subsequently disappeared when it was absorbed into
Eastern Australia Airlines.
Also in 2001 Sunstate began re-equipping with the Q300 version of the
Dash 8. It eventually received six Q300s and disposed of its remaining
Short 360s, thereby achieving an all-Dash 8 fleet.
In 2006 Sunstate took delivery of seven Bombardier Dash 8 Q400
aircraft. Five were placed in service on its Queensland routes, while
two were used to commence new services between Sydney and Canberra.
Logo:
1980's
Australian Airlines Ownership
QANTAS Ownership
Information
Source:
Logo: http://www.aerosite.net
History: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page
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