Aerocóndor Colombia Explained

Airline:Aerocóndor Colombia
(Aerovías Cóndor de Colombia)
Iata:OD
Icao:-
Callsign:AEROCÓNDOR
Founded:February 3, 1955
Commenced:October 7, 1955
Ceased:June 16, 1980
Hubs:Soledad International Airport
Secondary Hubs:El Dorado International Airport
Fleet Size:34
Destinations:28
Headquarters:Barranquilla, Colombia

Aerocóndor Colombia (legally Aerovías Cóndor de Colombia S.A.) was a Colombian airline headquartered in Barranquilla, Colombia.

History

Early operations

Aerocóndor Colombia was founded by six former LANSA[1] and Avianca pilots; Gustavo Lopez, Luis Donado, Eduardo Gonzalez, Juan B. Millon, Captain Julio Martin Florez, and Enrique Hanaberg, in association with two businessmen who together perceived an opportunity to establish a new airline to fly cargo from Colombia's northern industrial city of Barranquilla throughout the republic. Scheduled cargo services commenced on October 7, 1955[2] using Curtiss C-46s which were later complemented with Douglas C-47s. Progressive expansion saw most of these aircraft later reconfigured for passenger services, and Douglas C-54 and DC-6 were acquired during the early 1960s. International services between Barranquilla and Miami commenced during 1963. On May 1, 1969, the airline began re-equipping with L-188 Electras acquired from American Airlines. The Electras gradually replaced the airline's fleet of classic piston engine aircraft in the early 1970s.

Jet operations

Aerocóndor entered the jet age in December of 1972, purchasing an ex-American Airlines Boeing 720B. A Canadair CC-106 Yukon was also acquired for freight services in 1972 and a second ex-American Boeing 720B was added to the fleet in 1974. Introduction of jetliners modernized the airline's image and enabled it to begin operating jet services to Aruba, Curaçao, Guatemala City, Santo Domingo, Panama, and Port-au-Prince whilst also increasing the frequency of Miami services from Medellin, Bogotá, and San Andres. In 1975, financial control of Aerocóndor passed from the company's foundation management to Jorge Barco Vargas, formerly an Aerocivil chairman and the brother of a former president of the republic. A new orange and yellow colour scheme was applied to some aircraft, including the Boeing 720s, from 1975.

By this time, Aerocóndor had become a respected airline and was considered Colombia's second international airline. It also began to compete internationally with the country's national airline Avianca, to the concerns of both air traffic management and political representatives who wanted to protect Avianca's interests. By this stage Aerocóndor had grown to become Colombia's second international airline, and it was competing against the country's national flag carrier Avianca Colombia.

In 1977, the airline entered the wide-body era when it acquired a factory fresh Airbus A300, named "Ciudad de Barranquilla" in honor of the company's port of origin. This was the first A300 operated within the Latin American region, entering service on highly competitive routes to Miami. Plans for the introduction of a second A300 failed to materialize due to fiscal underachievement under the airline's new management. The financially strapped carrier soon entered a period of major crisis, due to poor control and internal corruption rather than market forces.

Decline

The company entered into a financial crisis due to the delay of four monthly payments for the A300, which forced the company to return the aircraft to Airbus. Aerocóndor was again sold in 1979 to the Cotes and Calderon brothers. The new president of the airline managed to overcome the crisis and recover the wide body aircraft. However, the financial state declined and the company was again in crisis. On April 24, 1980, liquidation was ordered and Aerocóndor ceased operations on June 16, 1980. Hope remained that services would be reinstated, but negotiations between the pilots, liquidators and the Colombian government were unsuccessful. Over the years, several of the pensioners of the airline had protested countless times demanding payment, overdue since the liquidation of the company. The airline's B707s and B720s were eventually stricken from the Colombian civil air register.

Destinations

National

International

Fleet

Aerocóndor Colombia operated the following aircraft types at various times over the years:[3] [4]

Aerocóndor Colombia fleet
AircraftTotalIntroducedRetiredNotes
Airbus A300B4119771979First A300 operator in South America
Boeing 707-120319751979
Boeing 720B219721980
Canadair CC-106 Yukon119741975
Cessna 180 Skywagon1
Cessna T-502
Curtiss C-46 Commando719551979
De Havilland Canada DHC-2 Beaver1
Douglas C-47 Skytrain21978
Douglas C-54 Skymaster319641969
Douglas DC-3119651965
Douglas DC-6319631971
Douglas DC-8-33F119791980Leased from Intercontinental Airways
Lockheed L-188A Electra719691979
Lockheed L-1649A Starliner119661966

Accidents and incidents

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://web.archive.org/web/20120211121010/http://lansa-aviacion.com/main.html#radiocomunicaciones Lansa
  2. R.E.G. Davies: Airlines of Latin America since 1919. Putnam Aeronautical Books, London 1997,, p. 250.
  3. Ulrich Klee, Frank Bucher et al.: jp airline-fleets international 80. Zürich-Airport 1980, S. 89.
  4. Web site: Aerocondor fleet. aerobernie.bplaced.net. February 20, 2021.
  5. Web site: L-1649A N7301C. Aviation Safety Network. January 18, 2022.
  6. Web site: DC-6 HK-754. Aviation Safety Network. June 3, 2016.
  7. Web site: L-188A HK-777. Aviation Safety Network. October 14, 2020.
  8. Web site: CL-44 HK-1972. 19750222-0. Aviation Safety Network. January 13, 2019.
  9. Web site: L-188AF HK-1976. 19750710-0. Aviation Safety Network. January 13, 2019.
  10. Web site: DC-6 HK-756. 19750710-1. Aviation Safety Network. January 13, 2019.