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Kalitta Charters is now the sole company with a contract with the US government to fly service members' remains to their final resting places. Kalitta Charters offers Executive Charter, Air Ambulance & Air Cargo services, and a FAR Part 145 aircraft repair station at their operating facility in Ypsilanti, Michigan.
At this point, the fleet consisted of Boeing 747, Lockheed L-1011, Douglas DC-8, Twin Beech, and Learjet aircraft, for air freight, air ambulance, and charter passenger operations. DC-9 of earlier American International at Detroit 1984 An American Intl' Airways Douglas DC-8-62CF landing at Miami A Learjet 25 of the subsidiary Kalitta Charters ...
Kalitta Air, an American cargo airline flying Boeing 747 and 777 aircraft Kalitta Air Flight 207 , a flight that crashed on takeoff in 2008 at Brussels Airport injuring several occupants Kalitta Charters , an American cargo airline flying medium-sized aircraft such as Boeing 737
Kalitta Air: CONNIE United States Operates B747-400's, B767-300ER's, B777F K9 KFS Kalitta Charters: KALITTA United States Operates Lear 25s, 35s, 36s Falcon 20s, CL601 CB* KII Kalitta Charters II: DRAGSTER United States Operates B727-200's, DC9-15 & 30, B737-400's KES Kallat El Saker Air Company: KALLAT EL SKER Libya RQ KMF Kam Air: KAMGAR ...
DC-9-30 at Kingston in 1971. Caribair was a Puerto Rican airline based in San Juan, Puerto Rico, that served over a dozen destinations in the Caribbean as well as Miami.In 1970, the air carrier was serving 16 destinations on 14 Caribbean islands, plus Miami.
Purdue Aeronautics primarily provided interstate civilian charter services but in the 1960s also provided some military charters. Purdue Aeronautics operated from Purdue University Airport in Lafayette, Indiana, eventually with DC-3 and later DC-6 aircraft. In 1963 it generated over $1mm in annual revenue (over $10mm in 2024 dollars). [1]
American International Airways Flight 808 was a cargo flight operated by American International Airways (now Kalitta Air) that crashed on August 18, 1993 while attempting to land at Leeward Point Field at the Guantánamo Bay Naval Base in Cuba. All three crew members on board survived with serious injuries.
DC-8-50 at Los Angeles. Overseas National Airways (ONA) was a supplemental air carrier (also known as an irregular air carrier or a non-scheduled carrier) during the period in which the Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB), a now defunct United States Federal agency, tightly regulated almost all US commercial air transport.