Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A Boeing 737-800 aircraft operated by Dutch flag-carrier KLM takes off from Tegel airport in Berlin on December 29, 2019. A person died at an Amsterdam airport after "ending up" in the engine of a ...
28 December 2024: Flight 1204, operated by a 24.1-year-old Boeing 737-800 (PH-BXM), flying from Oslo Airport, Gardermoen to Amsterdam Airport Schiphol, diverted to and made an emergency landing at Torp Sandefjord Airport in Norway after a loud noise was heard shortly after takeoff.
KLM Flight 592; KLM Flight 607-E; KLM Flight 608; KLM Flight 633; KLM Flight 823; KLM Flight 844; KLM Flight 861; KLM Flight 867; 1925 KLM Fokker F.III Forêt de Mormal crash; 1928 KLM Fokker F.III Waalhaven crash; 1934 KLM Douglas DC-2 crash; 1935 Amsterdam Fokker F.XXII crash; 1935 KLM Bushehr incident; 1935 San Giacomo Douglas DC-2 crash ...
According to Aviation Safety Network, NLM CityHopper records a single accident/incident event. [13]6 October 1981: A Fokker F-28-4000, registration PH-CHI, that was operating the first leg of an international scheduled Rotterdam–Eindhoven–Hamburg passenger service as NLM CityHopper Flight 431, entered a tornado that caused the starboard wing to separate from the fuselage.
KLM operations at Amsterdam Airport Schiphol. KLM was set up by Albert Plesman on 7 October 1919 and started operations on 19 May 1920. [1] The first route served was the Amsterdam to London, flown with DH.9As that carried just two passengers on a charter basis.
KLM Cityhopper Flight 433 was a Saab 340B, registered as PH-KSH, which crashed during an emergency landing on 4 April 1994 and killing 3 occupants, including the captain. Flight 433 was a routine scheduled flight from Amsterdam , the Netherlands , to Cardiff , Wales , United Kingdom.
KLM Cityhopper is the regional airline subsidiary of KLM, headquartered in Haarlemmermeer, North Holland, Netherlands. It is based at nearby Amsterdam Airport Schiphol. As a subsidiary of Air France–KLM, it is an affiliate of SkyTeam. The airline operates scheduled European feeder services on behalf of KLM.
The aircraft, PH-BFC, remained in service with KLM until its retirement from the fleet on 14 March 2018. [8] It became part of the KLM Asia fleet in 1995 when the subsidiary was established to allow KLM to fly to both Taiwan and mainland China. PH-BFC was later repainted in the standard KLM livery after a maintenance check. [9]