Alpine Air Express

Alpine Air Express
IATA
5A
ICAO
AIP
Callsign
ALPINE AIR
Founded 1974
Hubs Provo Municipal Airport
Fleet size 26
Destinations 15
Headquarters Provo, Utah USA
Website http://www.alpine-air.com

Alpine Air Express is an American airline based in Provo, Utah, USA. It operates scheduled air cargo services on over 15 routes throughout Utah, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Montana. Its main base is the Provo Municipal Airport.[1]

Contents

History

The airline was established in 1972. In October 2004 Universal Express acquired the majority stake (80%) in Alpine Air Express, the other 20% being publicly held. It originally operated scheduled passenger and cargo services, aircraft maintenance and a flight school, but now concentrates on cargo services. The airline tried to establish Alpine Air Chile,[2] in an attempt of entering Chile's air freight market. The project was not successful and was discontinued in 2005, with three Beechcraft 1900C being re-integrated into the US fleet.[1]

Fleet

The Alpine Air Express fleet includes the following aircraft (at March 2007):[1]

Incidents

October 1992-- An Alpine Air PA-42 deviated off course and crashed into a mesa in Grand Junction, CO while operating as an airtaxi flight. There were three fatalities: the pilot and two passengers.

August 2004-- While operating a Billings to Kalispell, MT flight for the US Postal Service, the Beech 99 crashed into Big Baldy mountain, located near Great Falls, MT. Two crewmembers died.

January 2008-- An Alpine Air Raytheon Beech 1900 crashed into the Pacific Ocean on a cargo flight between Honolulu Intl Airport and Lihue Intl in Hawaii. This crash claimed one life: the pilot of the aircraft.

May 2008-- Upon departure from Billings, MT, ATC instructed the Beech 1900C to turn left. The Part 135 cargo plane slowly turned right and crashed into a warehouse nearby. Witnesses say the plane was inverted prior to the crash which claimed the life of the single pilot onboard.

External links

References

  1. ^ a b c "Directory: World Airlines". Flight International: p. 74. 2007-03-27. 
  2. ^ Alpine Air Chile code data at planespotters.net