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Japan Air System Co., Ltd. (JAS) (日本エアシステム, Nihon Ea Shisutemu) was the smallest of the big three Japanese airlines.In contrast to the other two, JAL and ANA, JAS' international route network was very small, but its domestic network incorporated many smaller airports that were not served by the two larger airlines.
A holding company for JAL and Japan Airlines System, a carrier merging into JAL, was established on 2 October 2002; the head office of that company, Japan Airlines System (JALS) (日本航空システム, Nihon Kōkū Shisutemu), was in 2-15-1 Kōnan in Shinagawa Intercity, Minato, Tokyo. On 11 August 2003, the headquarters of JAS moved from ...
Japan Air System merged into Japan Airlines in the early 2000s. [2] Nearly all of the aircraft used in the Japan Domestic Airlines' fleet were consisted of NAMC YS-11s. Both airlines had a similar color scheme from the beginning, usually blue and white, or with a blue tail. Japan Domestic Airlines focused mostly on mainland to island flights ...
Hokkaido Air System: 北海道エアシステム JL/6L JAL/NTH NORTH AIR 1998 Ibex Airlines: アイベックスエアラインズ FW IBX IBEX 2004 J-Air: ジェイエア JL/XM JAL/JLJ JAPAN AIR 1996 Japan Air Commuter: 日本エアコミューター JL/JC JAL/JAC COMMUTER 1983 Japan Transocean Air: 日本トランスオーシャン航空 NU JTA ...
Japan Air Commuter (JAC) is a Japanese regional airline based in Kirishima, Kagoshima Prefecture. [2] It operates feeder services in support of Japan Airlines and All Nippon Airways . [ 3 ] Its main base is Kagoshima Airport , with focus cities at Itami Airport , Amami Airport and Fukuoka Airport . [ 4 ]
Toa Airways (東亜航空, Tōa Kōkū) was a Japanese airline and the predecessor of Japan Air System. Founded on November 30, 1953, [1] it merged with Japan Domestic Airlines on May 15, 1971, to form Toa Domestic Airlines, which went on to become Japan Air System. [2]
Japan Air System This page was last edited on 7 February 2017, at 05:25 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 ...
Japan Air System Flight 451 was a Japan Air System flight from Nagoya Airport in the Nagoya area of Aichi Prefecture, Japan to New Chitose Airport in Sapporo, Hokkaido Prefecture, with a stopover at Hanamaki Airport in Hanamaki, Iwate Prefecture. On April 18, 1993, the Douglas DC-9-41 operating the flight crashed while landing at Hanamaki Airport.