Northern Thunderbird Air Explained

Airline:Northern Thunderbird Air
Fleet Size:14
Aoc:11492
Destinations:Charter only
Iata:-
Icao:NTA
Callsign:THUNDERBIRD
Parent:Northern Thunderbird Air Limited
Founded:1971
Headquarters:Prince George, British Columbia, Canada
Hubs:Prince George
Alliance:Central Mountain Air
Website:http://www.ntair.ca/

Northern Thunderbird Air Inc or NT Air is a Canadian charter airline and medevac service based in Prince George, British Columbia.

History

NT Air was formed in 1971 with the amalgamation of two of northern British Columbia's airlines: Northern Mountain Airlines and Thunderbird Airlines.

Northern Mountain Airlines began operations at Fort St. James in 1959. By 1971, they were one of the larger airlines in British Columbia. With a mixed fleet of Cessnas, DHC-2 Beavers, Beech 18s, Grumman Goose, and helicopters; Northern Mountain served Northern Canada including Alberta, Yukon and Northwest Territories. By spinning off its airplane division to merge with Thunderbird in 1971, Northern Mountain was able to concentrate its efforts on helicopters only and did so through 2000.[1]

Thunderbird Airlines started in the early 1960s when it acquired the bush operations of Pacific Western Airlines in Prince George. From its base at Tabor Lake, Thunderbird operated Cessnas, Beavers and DHC Otters on floats and skis servicing the new town of Mackenzie and the northern villages and logging camps of Williston Lake. In the early 1970s, Thunderbird secured a subcontract from Pacific Western Airlines to service the smaller communities of B.C. to feed that traffic into PWA's jet aircraft at Prince George, Kamloops and Kelowna. The need for a hangar on the Prince George Airport to fulfill this contract was the catalyst for the merger talks that resulted in the formation of Northern Thunderbird Air in 1971.

Since its inception, Northern Thunderbird Air has adapted with the times and economic cycles with a fleet of 18 aircraft, three bases, 21 scheduled points and over 100 employees.

Sister airline

Northern Thunderbird Air is the sister airline of Central Mountain Air, utilizing their large aircraft capability and bases in British Columbia and Alberta.[2]

Services

Fleet

As of January 2024, Northern Thunderbird Air has the following aircraft registered with Transport Canada:

AircraftCountVariantsNotes
Beechcraft 1900111900D18 passengers[3]
Beechcraft Super King Air3300 seriesAir ambulance[4]

The Northern Thunderbird Beechcraft 1900D's bear the NTA paint scheme and logo but are dual registered with sister company Central Mountain Air.

Incidents and accidents

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Northern Mountain Airlines . Airline History . 11 October 2020.
  2. Web site: Charter Flight Information NT Air. 2020-12-10. www.ntair.ca.
  3. http://www.ntair.ca/our-fleet/beech-1900d Beechcraft 1900D
  4. http://www.ntair.ca/our-fleet/beechcraft-king-air-350-medevac-operations Beechcraft King Air 350: MEDEVAC Operations
  5. News: Richmond plane crash leaves pilot dead. CBC News. 28 October 2011. 28 October 2011.
  6. Web site: Global BC Twitter. Global BC. 16 November 2011.