1944 Grumman G-21A Goose, c/n B-101, CF-VFU, FIFT. Dockside somewhere up Knight Inlet, B.C., Canada in spring 1969.

[1959 Kodak Retina IIIS (Type 027) rangefinder 35-mm roll film camera, s/n 86125, with Schneider-Kreuznach Retina-Xenon 50-mm f/1.9 Synchro Compur lens, s/n 6841319; Kodak Plus-X Pan (ISO 125/22°) 36-exposure black & white negative film]


© Copyright photograph by Uwe Kündrunar Scharnberg, 1969 / Stephan Alexander Scharnberg, March 2011





“The whole history of the Canadian North can be divided into two periods—before and after the aeroplane.”
Hugh L. Keenleyside, Deputy Canadian Minister of Mines and Resources, October 1949




Friday, February 15, 2013

Beaver and two Turbine Otters

1958 de Havilland Canada DHC-2 Beaver Mk. I, c/n 1249, C-FAOP, Empress of Ganges, Saltspring Air; 1959 de Havilland Canada DHC-3T Turbine Otter, c/n 339, C-FHAX, “313”, Harbour Air; and 1953 de Havilland Canada DHC-3T Turbine Otter, c/n 21, C-FRNO, “301”, Harbour Air at Vancouver International Water Airport (CAM9), Moray Channel, Richmond, B.C., immediately adjacent to South Terminal, Vancouver International Airport (YVR/CYVR), Sea Island, Richmond, B.C., Canada on Friday, January 18, 2013 at 11:25 PST

1959  de Havilland Canada DHC-3T Turbine Otter, c/n 339, C-FHAX, “313”, Harbour Air (Harbour Air Seaplanes/Harbour Air Ltd. dba), South Terminal, Vancouver International Airport (YVR/CYVR), Sea Island, Richmond, B.C., Canada, based at Vancouver Harbour Water Airport (CXH/CYHC), Coal Harbour, Burrard Inlet, Vancouver, B.C.
  • powered by one 750-shp Pratt & Whitney Canada PT6A-34 turboprop engine with constant-speed, full-feathering reversible-pitch, three-blade Hartzell propeller
  • pilot, 14 passengers, STOL (short take-off and landing) utility transport
  • Edo 7490 floats, scenic windows and Vazar bubble windows
  • built by The de Havilland Aircraft of Canada Limited, Downsview, Ontario, Canada at Downsview Airport (YZD/CYZD), Downsview, Ontario
  • built as DHC-3 Otter, powered by one 600-hp Pratt & Whitney R-1340-S1H1-G Wasp supercharged nine-cylinder, single-row, air-cooled radial piston engine with constant-speed three-blade Hamilton Standard Hydromatic propeller
  • delivered as U-1A-DH Otter, s/n 58-1720 to US Army on November 6, 1959
  • fixed conventional landing gear and tailwheel
  • N41755, Woods Air Service (Woods Air Service Inc.), Palmer, Alaska, USA
  • fixed conventional landing gear and tailwheel
  • certificate of airworthiness issued on March 29, 1974
  • accident with substantial damage caused by an inflight fire in the engine’s accessory drive assembly and the rough uneven forced landing, on a domestic non-scheduled passenger flight, pilot and one passenger, no injuries nor fatalities, en route between Nikolai Airport (NIB/PAFS), Nikolai, Alaska and Silvertip Lodge, Soldotna, Alaska, occured near McGrath, Alaska, USA on July 22, 1992 at 15:30 AKDT (Alaska Daylight Time)
  • tt 10,587 hours
  • stored outside at Palmer Municipal Airport (PAQ/PAAQ), Palmer, Alaska, USA since recovery from accident
  • sold to Harbour Air in November 2005
  • N-registration cancelled on January 24, 2006
  • imported in 2006
  • trucked from Palmer Municipal Airport (PAQ/PAAQ) to South Terminal, Vancouver International Airport (YVR/CYVR)
  • rebuilt and Vazar turbine conversion by Aeroflite Industries Ltd., South Terminal, Vancouver International Airport (YVR/CYVR) in winter 2005–2006
  • registered to Harbour Air on January 25, 2006
  • active

1953 de Havilland Canada DHC-3T Turbine Otter, c/n 21, C-FRNO, “301”, Harbour Air (Harbour Air Seaplanes/Harbour Air Ltd. dba), South Terminal, Vancouver International Airport (YVR/CYVR), Sea Island, Richmond, B.C., Canada, based at Vancouver Harbour Water Airport (CXH/CYHC), Coal Harbour, Burrard Inlet, Vancouver, B.C.
  • powered by one 750-shp Pratt & Whitney Canada PT6A-34 turboprop engine with constant-speed, full-feathering reversible-pitch, three-blade Hartzell propeller
  • pilot, 14 passengers, STOL (short take-off and landing) utility transport
  • Edo 7490 floats, scenic windows and Vazar bubble windows
  • built by The de Havilland Aircraft of Canada Limited, Downsview, Ontario, Canada at Downsview Airport (YZD/CYZD), Downsview, Ontario
  • built as DHC-3 Otter, powered by one 600-hp Pratt & Whitney R-1340-S1H1-G Wasp supercharged nine-cylinder, single-row, air-cooled radial piston engine with constant-speed three-blade Hamilton Standard Hydromatic propeller
  • first six ordered by RNoAF in 1953
  • order year and construction number became the RNoAF serial number
  • delivered as 53-21, O-AD to RNoAF (Kongelige Norske Luftforsvaret/Royal Norwegian Air Force) on March 2, 1954
  • Bristol 7200 (Edo-designed Model 324-7200) amphibious floats
  • third of ten Otters delivered to RNoAF, third in batch of first six (DHC-3 Otters c/n 18, 53-18, O-AB, later XJ-S; c/n 20, 53-20, O-AC; c/n 21, 53-21, O-AD; c/n 29, 53-29, O-AE, later XJ-T; c/n 30, 53-30, O-AF, later XJ-U; c/n 31, 53-31, O-AG, later JT-R) formally handed over on March 2, 1954 and then shipped in crates from Downsview Airport (YZD/CYZD) to Oslo, Norway and arriving in Oslo Harbour on April 8, 1954
  • last four ordered and delivered with two in 1960 (c/n 395, 60-395, O-AH, later XJ-V; c/n 397, 60-397, O-AI, later XJ-W), one in 1961 (c/n 423, 61-423, O-AK, later JT-X), and one in 1964 (c/n 441, 64-441, JT-S)
  • assembled by maintenance personnel from Widerøes Flyveselskap A/S, Oslo, Norway and tested at Kjeller Air Base, Kjeller, Norway
  • (?) No. 335 Light Transport Squadron, RNoAF, based at Gardermoen AS (Air Station), Gardermoen, Norway
  • Congo (former Belgian Congo) gained independence from Belgium on June 30, 1960, resulting in the Congo Crisis
  • ONUC’s mission in the Congo from July 1960 to June 1964
  • crated and shipped in Operation “Safari” by USAF Douglas C-124 Globemaster II from Gardermoen AS to Congo in July 1960
  • under agreement with the Congolese government, Belgium retained control of Kamina Air Base until October 1960 when base was taken over by UN/ONU (United Nations/Organisation des Nations unies)
  • 304, Elisabeth, Support Wing Air Squadron, ONUC (Opération des Nations unies au Congo/United Nations Operation in the Congo), UN/ONU, based at Kamina Air Base, near Kamina, Congo in July 1960
  • on loan to United Nations, operated by RNoAF officers
  • fixed conventional landing gear and tailwheel
  • transport, communications, and general utility tasks
  • control of Kamina Air Base went to Congolese Armed Forces, Democratic Republic of the Congo in early 1964
  • Yemen entered into a state of civil war in 1962
  • UNYOM (United Nations Yemen Observation Mission), UN/ONU from July 4, 1963 to September 4, 1964
  • flown from Kamina Air Base to airfield in Sana’a, Yemen arriving on October 2, 1963
  • 304, No. 134 ATU (Air Transport Unit), RCAF operated on behalf of UNYOM, UN/ONU and manned by RCAF personnel
  • based either at airfield in Jizan, Saudi Arabia or airfield in Najran, Yemen
  • fixed conventional landing gear and tailwheel
  • reconnaissance
  • No. 134 ATU became a detachment of No. 115 ATU, RCAF operated on behalf of UNEF (United Nations Emergency Force), UN/ONU on December 15, 1963
  • based at airfield in Najran, Yemen
  • flown to UN airfield at El Arish, Egypt in January 1964
  • El Arish on western side of ADL (Armistice Demarcation Line) about halfway between Gaza City, Gaza Strip and Suez Canal
  • withdrawn from use and stored at El Arish awaiting disposal
  • handed over for disposal to Norway’s de Havilland agents Halle & Peterson, Oslo, Norway
  • sold to Aero Leasing (G. Rae MacLeod), Montréal, Québec, Canada on May 26, 1964 but registered as N128F, Ferrer Aviation Inc. (Frank Ferrer), Miami, Florida, USA who ferried N128F and DHC-3 Otter, c/n 164, N127F back to Canada
  • fixed conventional landing gear and tailwheel
  • ferried still in UN all-white colour scheme from El Arish via Ringway Airport (MAN/EGCC), Ringway, Manchester, England and Prestwick Airport (PIK/EGPK), Prestwick, South Ayrshire, Scotland on June 21 & 22, 1964; and via Keflavík International Airport (KEF/BIKF), Keflavík, Iceland; Narsarsuaq Airport (UAK/BGBW), Narsarsuaq, Greenland; and RCAF Station Goose Bay/Goose Bay Airport (YYR/CYYR), Goose Bay, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada to Aéroport international Dorval de Montréal, Dorval, Montréal, Québec, Canada
  • upon arrival N128F re-registered as CF-RNO and N127F re-registered as CF-RNP both to G. Rae MacLeod
  • imported in 1964
  • CF-RNO, Pacific Western Airlines (Pacific Western Airlines Ltd.), Vancouver International Airport (YVR/CYVR), Sea Island, Richmond, B.C., Canada from June 1964 to December 1968
  • Edo 7200 amphibious floats
  • accident at Schaft Lake, B.C., Canada on December 13, 1968
  • repaired
  • C-FRNO, Trans-Provincial Airlines (Trans-Provincial Airlines Ltd.), Terrace, B.C., Canada in 1969
  • Edo 7200 amphibious floats
  • Trans-Provincial Airlines purchased by Jim Pattison Industries in 1979
  • C-FRNO, Jim Pattison Industries (Jim Pattison Industries Ltd.), Prince Rupert, B.C., Canada on May 14, 1979 and cancelled on June 2, 1988
  • operated in Trans-Provincial Airlines markings and colour scheme
  • Edo 7200 amphibious floats
  • ownership of Trans-Provincial Airlines by Jim Pattison Industries ended in October 1986
  • C-FRNO, Trans-Provincial Airlines (Trans-Provincial Airlines Ltd.), Prince Rupert, B.C., Canada on June 2, 1988 and cancelled on May 13, 1993
  • Edo 7200 amphibious floats
  • Trans-Provincial Airlines purchased by Harbour Air in 1993
  • registered to Harbour Air on May 13, 1993
  • Vazar turbine conversion
  • Edo 7490 floats
  • commenced new scheduled service from Langley Regional Airport (YNJ/CYNJ), Langley, B.C. to Victoria Inner Harbour Airport (YWH/CYWH), Victoria, Vancouver Island, B.C., Canada on November 1, 2006
  • Wipline 8000 amphibious floats
  • the only amphibious scheduled service in the region for a long time
  • Harbour Air grounded this service on May 20, 2011 due to low passenger numbers and fuel price surges
  • returned to Edo 7490 floats
  • active



An “airprox” incident was recorded on November 1, 2005 involving C-FRNO and 1979 Sikorsky S-61N Mk. II, c/n 61-821, C-FXEC, Executive Transport Airways (Executive Transport Airways Ltd.), Port Alberni, Vancouver Island, B.C., Canada; quoting from the incident summary: “The Executive Air Transport helicopter operating as JBA 903 for Helijet was maintaining three thousand feet on an IFR flight plan in IMC about ten nautical miles south of the Vancouver VOR en route from Vancouver Harbour to Victoria Harbour. The crew was advised of traffic at 12 o’clock, four miles at 2,400 feet. Shortly thereafter the crew observed the Turbo Otter on floats pass close to their left side, about one quarter mile and four hundred feet below. The Turbo Otter was operating as HR 301 from Victoria Harbour to Vancouver Harbour, VFR at 2,500 feet. The pilot reported that visibility was reduced in rain but was still VFR. He reported that he saw some cloud and climbed to two thousand seven hundred feet to clear it, then observed the helicopter at 10 o’clock high. He reported that he was not on a collision course with the helicopter and that no evasive action was necessary”.
de Havilland Canada DHC-3 Otter: A History by Karl E. Hayes, CD-ROM Update 2 (Correct to January 1, 2007); edited by Stephan Alexander Scharnberg

[Nikon Coolpix L20 point-and-shoot 10 MP digital camera, Nikkor 38–136-mm f/3.1–6.7 lens]

© Copyright photograph by Stephan Alexander Scharnberg, January 2013

1958 de Havilland Canada DHC-2 Beaver Mk. I, c/n 1249, C-FAOP, Empress of Ganges, Saltspring Air

The arrival of 1958 de Havilland Canada DHC-2 Beaver Mk. I, c/n 1249, C-FAOP, Empress of Ganges, Saltspring Air at Vancouver International Water Airport (CAM9), Moray Channel, Richmond, B.C., immediately adjacent to South Terminal, Vancouver International Airport (YVR/CYVR), Sea Island, Richmond, B.C., Canada on Friday, January 18, 2013 at 11:25 PST

1958  de Havilland Canada DHC-2 Beaver Mk. I, c/n 1249, C-FAOP, Empress of Ganges, Saltspring Air (Salt Spring Island Air Ltd.), Ganges, Saltspring Island, B.C., Canada, based at Ganges Water Aerodrome (YGG/CAX6), Ganges Harbour, Saltspring Island, B.C.
  • powered by one 450-hp Pratt & Whitney R-985-AN-14B Wasp Junior supercharged nine-cylinder, single-row, air-cooled radial piston engine with constant-speed three-blade Hartzell propeller
  • pilot, six passengers, STOL (short take-off and landing) utility transport
  • Edo 4930 floats, bubble cabin windows, nine-inch engine extension
  • built by The de Havilland Aircraft of Canada Limited, Downsview, Ontario, Canada at Downsview Airport (YZD/CYZD), Downsview, Ontario
  • built, powered by one 450-hp Pratt & Whitney R-985-AN-14B Wasp Junior supercharged nine-cylinder, single-row, air-cooled radial piston engine with constant-speed two-blade Hamilton Standard propeller
  • delivered as CF-AOP to Algoma Steel Corporation Ltd., Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, Canada on October 31, 1958
  • re-registered as C-FAOP
  • (?) C-FAOP, Crown Zellerbach (Crown Zellerbach Canada Ltd.)
  • (?) leased to Island Air (Island Airlines Ltd.), Campbell River, Vancouver Island, B.C., Canada
  • based at Campbell River Seaplane Base (CAE3), Tyee Spit, Campbell River, Vancouver Island, B.C.
  • Airwest Airlines (Airwest Airlines Ltd.), Gulf-Air (Gulf-Air Aviation Services Ltd.), Haida Airlines (Haida Airlines Ltd.), Island Air (Island Airlines Ltd.), and West Coast Air (West Coast Air Services Ltd.) purchased by Jim Pattison Industries (Jim Pattison Industries Ltd.) and merged to form Air BC (Jim Pattison Industries Ltd.) (CP Air Commuter partner) on December 1, 1980
  • leased to Air BC (Air BC Ltd./Jim Pattison Industries Ltd./CP Air Commuter partner), South Terminal, Vancouver International Airport (YVR/CYVR), Sea Island, Richmond, B.C., Canada until 1982
  • C-FAOP, Framar Aviation Ltd., Campbell River, Vancouver Island, B.C., Canada cancelled on May 27, 1982
  • C-FAOP, Tyee Airways (Tyee Airways Ltd.), Sechelt, B.C., Canada cancelled on May 17, 1983
  • based at Porpoise Bay Water Aerodrome (CAX3), Sechelt, B.C.
  • C-FAOP, Brenco Investments Ltd., Vancouver, B.C., Canada cancelled on December 4, 1987
  • C-FAOP, Thunderbird Air (Thunderbird Air 1987 Ltd.), Sechelt, B.C., Canada on December 4, 1987 and cancelled on March 8, 1990
  • based at Porpoise Bay Water Aerodrome (CAX3)
  • C-FAOP, Baxter Aviation (Baxter Aviation Ltd.), Nanaimo, Vancouver Island, B.C., Canada on March 8, 1990 and cancelled on March 20, 1996
  • based at Nanaimo Harbour Water Airport (ZNA/CAC8), Nanaimo, Vancouver Island, B.C.
  • C-FAOP, Harbour Air (Harbour Air Seaplanes/Harbour Air Ltd. dba), South Terminal, Vancouver International Airport (YVR/CYVR), Sea Island, Richmond, B.C., Canada on March 20, 1996 and cancelled on May 14, 2004
  • based at South Terminal, Vancouver International Airport (YVR/CYVR) 
  • registered to Saltspring Air on May 28, 2004
  • nine-inch engine extension modification
  • I saw C-FAOP at Maple Bay, Vancouver Island, B.C., Canada in summer 2007
  • active

[N
ikon Coolpix L20 point-and-shoot 10 MP digital camera, Nikkor 38–136-mm f/3.1–6.7 lens]

© Copyright photograph by Stephan Alexander Scharnberg, January 2013

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

1980 Sikorsky S-76A Mk. II, c/n 760074, C-GHJW, Helijet International

1980 Sikorsky S-76A Mk. II, c/n 760074, C-GHJW, Helijet International starting engines on tarmac adjacent to Helijet International’s head office, 5911 Airport Road South, at South Terminal, Vancouver International Airport (YVR/CYVR), Sea Island, Richmond, B.C., Canada on Friday, January 18, 2013 at 11:09 PST

1980 Sikorsky S-76A Mk. II, c/n 760074, C-GHJW, Helijet International (Helijet International Inc.), South Terminal, Vancouver International Airport (YVR/CYVR), Sea Island, Richmond, B.C., Canada, based at South Terminal, Vancouver International Airport (YVR/CYVR)
  • titled HeliJet
  • powered by two 650-shp Allison 250-C30S free turbine turboshaft engines with fully-articulated four-blade main rotor and port side four-blade anti-torque tail rotor
  • crew of two (pilot and co-pilot), 12 passengers, all-weather medium-size air taxi
  • retractable tricycle landing gear
  • built by Sikorsky Aircraft Corporation (Subsidiary of United Technologies Corporation, Hartford, Connecticut), Stratford, Connecticut, USA at Stratford, Connecticut
  • built as S-76A, powered by two 557-shp Allison 250-C30 free turbine turboshaft engines with fully-articulated four-blade main rotor and port side four-blade anti-torque tail rotor
  • N1547F, further details unknown
  • N586C, further details unknown but cancelled on December 1, 1989
  • imported in 1989
  • C-GHJW, Helijet Airways (Helijet Airways Inc.), South Terminal, Vancouver International Airport (YVR/CYVR), Sea Island, Richmond, B.C., Canada on December 7, 1989 and cancelled on May 9, 2000
  • Helijet Airways (Helijet Airways Inc.) renamed as Helijet International (Helijet International Inc.)
  • registered to Helijet International on May 9, 2000
  • converted to S-76A Mk. II, re-engined and avionics upgrade
  • world’s highest flight time S-76 airframe of tt 37,025 hours in February 2012
  • active

[Nikon
 Coolpix L20 point-and-shoot 10 MP digital camera, Nikkor 38–136-mm f/3.1–6.7 lens, s/n 51002451]

© Copyright photograph by Stephan Alexander Scharnberg, January 2013

1999 Sikorsky S-76C+, c/n 760500, C-GHHJ, Helijet International

1999 Sikorsky S-76C+, c/n 760500, C-GHHJ, Helijet International on a helipad adjacent to Helijet International’s head office, 5911 Airport Road South, at South Terminal, Vancouver International Airport (YVR/CYVR), Sea Island, Richmond, B.C., Canada on Friday, January 18, 2013 at 11:09 PST

The Lions (West Lion at 1,646 metres, East Lion at 1,606 metres) still covered in snow, their pointed peaks just visible behind Cypress Provincial Park in the North Shore Mountains

1999 Sikorsky S-76C+, c/n 760500, C-GHHJ, Helijet International (Helijet International Inc.), South Terminal, Vancouver International Airport (YVR/CYVR), Sea Island, Richmond, B.C., Canada, based at South Terminal, Vancouver International Airport (YVR/CYVR)
  • titled BC AMBULANCE and subtitled HeliJet in British Columbia Ambulance Service colour scheme
  • operated for BCAS (British Columbia Ambulance Service)
  • powered by two 787-shp Turboméca Arriel 2S1 FADEC-equipped free turbine turboshaft engines with fully-articulated four-blade main rotor and port side four-blade anti-torque tail rotor
  • crew of two (pilot and co-pilot), one or two stretchers and four medical attendants, all-weather medium-size air ambulance
  • retractable tricycle landing gear, composite blades, quiet tail rotor with curved blades, active noise and vibration control system, advanced health and usage monitoring system, Honeywell EFIS (electronic flight instrument system) and Collins Proline II avionics suite (PFD—primary flight display, MFD—multi-function display, and EICAS—engine indications and crew alerting system display), and three-screen LCD integrated instrument display system (IIDS) for engine and rotor information
  • built by Sikorsky Aircraft Corporation (Subsidiary of United Technologies Corporation, Hartford, Connecticut), Stratford, Connecticut, USA at Stratford, Connecticut
  • built as S-76C, powered by two 730-shp Turboméca Arriel 2S turboshaft engines with fully-articulated four-blade main rotor and port side four-blade anti-torque tail rotor
  • 12-seat passenger configuration, corporate transport
  • certificate of airworthiness issued on June 30, 1999
  • N88CP, Pfizer Inc., West Trenton, New Jersey, USA on September 14, 2000 and cancelled on March 3, 2011
  • imported on March 3, 2011
  • converted to S-76C+, re-engined and avionics upgrade
  • registered to Helijet International on April 18, 2011
  • converted from 12-seat passenger configuration to air ambulance
  • active

[Nikon
 Coolpix L20 point-and-shoot 10 MP digital camera, Nikkor 38–136-mm f/3.1–6.7 lens, s/n 51002451]

© Copyright photographs by Stephan Alexander Scharnberg, January 2013