Paninternational Explained

Airline:Paninternational
Iata:DR
Icao:-
Callsign:DELTA ROMEO
Founded:1968 (as Panair)
Commenced:January 1, 1970 (as Paninternational)
Ceased:October 6, 1971
Bases:
Fleet Size:6
Parent:Paneuropa
Headquarters:Munich, West Germany

Paninternational was a West German leisure airline headquartered in Munich with bases at Munich-Riem Airport and Düsseldorf Airport.

History

The airline was founded by Munich-based tour operator Paneuropa in 1968 as Panair and started operations on January 1, 1970. After commencing leisure operations within Europe using their new BAC 1-11-515FBs, Paninternational rapidly acquired two Boeing 707-120B pre-owned by American Airlines to expand into long-haul flights.

It ceased operations already on October 6, 1971 in the aftermath of the accident of Flight 112, which gained large media attention and negative publicity.

Fleet

Paninternational operated the following aircraft:[1] [2]

AircraftTotalIntroducedRetiredNotes
Boeing 707-120B219701971
BAC 1-11-515FB419691971One written off as Flight 112
Sud Aviation Caravelle III119691969Leased from Trans-Union

Accident

On September 6, 1971, a BAC 1-11-515FB (registered D-ALAR) was lost when it crash-landed on a highway shortly after takeoff from Hamburg Airport on its way to Málaga. 22 passengers and crew were killed in the incident, caused by an unintentional filling of the aircraft's engine water injection system with jet fuel which led to a failure of both engines.[3]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Paninternational Fleet Details and History. Planespotters.net. December 14, 2021.
  2. Web site: Paninternational. Aerobernie.bplaced.net. April 12, 2023.
  3. Web site: ASN Aircraft accident BAC One-Eleven 515FB D-ALAR Hamburg-Fuhlsbüttel Airport (HAM). Aviation Safety Network.