Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
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.
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 ...
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 serves over 170 destinations across the world, as of July 2022 [14] [15] and 163 destinations during the winter 2022 season. [16] Following is a list of destinations the airline and its subsidiaries KLM Cargo and KLM Cityhopper fly to according to their scheduled services.
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 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 ...
The 1946 KLM Douglas C-47 Amsterdam accident was the crash of a KLM Royal Dutch Airlines flight from London to Amsterdam on 14 November 1946. The accident occurred as the aircraft was attempting to land at Amsterdam's airport in poor weather. All 26 passengers and crew on board were killed.
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]