Air Tindi

Air Tindi
IATA ICAO Callsign
8T TID DISCOVERY
Founded 1988
Hubs Yellowknife Airport
Fort Simpson Airport
Fleet size N/A,[1] 27[2]
Destinations 7[3]
Parent company Discovery Air
Headquarters Yellowknife, Northwest Territories
Key people Alasdair Martin (President)
Website http://www.airtindi.com
View of three Air Tindi, Twin Otter airplanes, Yellowknife
Air Tindi airplane operating in winter

Air Tindi is an airline based in Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, Canada. Now owned by Discovery Air, it operates scheduled and on demand charter services. Its main base is Yellowknife Airport and the airline was previously owned by the Arychuk family.[4] The name Tindi means "the big lake" or "Great Slave Lake" in the local native Tłı̨chǫ Yatiì language.

History

Air Tindi was established by two families, Alex Arychuk and his wife Sheila, and his brother Peter Arychuk and his wife Teri.[5] It began operations on 1 November 1988, with four float/ski aircraft. In 1990, it purchased its first De Havilland Canada DHC-6 Twin Otter with the help of the Rae-Edzo Development Corporation, allowing the airline to expand and provide more services to the growing mining exploration industry. In 1991, Air Tindi merged with Latham Island Airways and acquired a further four aircraft in the process.[4] By mid-1992, Air Tindi was operating four Twin Otters on floats. In 1993, its first large aircraft was purchased, a DHC 4 Caribou for re-supply work with the mining industry. A DHC Dash 7 was acquired in 1996.

On 19 December 2006, Air Tindi was sold to Discovery Air (TSX at DA.A), a publicly traded holding company based in London, Ontario.[6] The founders originally maintained their positions with Air Tindi, but various corporate disagreements led to Alex Arychuk leaving as president, and departing the Discovery Air board.[7]

In August 2011 the Government of Nunavut announced that it had awarded a contract to Air Tindi and its partner Aqsaqniq, owned by Dennis Lyall, to provide medivac services to the Kitikmeot Region of Nunavut. The current holder of the contract, Adlair Aviation, has appealed to the Nunavummi Nangminiqaqtunik Ikajuuti[8] and a decision was expected by 11 October 2011.[9][10] The decision to dismiss the appeal was made 29 October 2011 and the news released 31 October. Adlair was given an extension on their contract until the end of November 2011.[11]

Destinations

Air Tindi operates services (subject to traffic demand) to the following domestic scheduled destinations (as of January 2016):[3]

Fleet

As of January 2016, Air Tindi had the following aircraft registered with Transport Canada and listed with Air Tindi:[1][2]

Air Tindi Fleet
AircraftNo. of Aircraft
(TC list)
No. of Aircraft
(AT list)
VariantsNotes
Beechcraft Super King Air11N/AModel 200, Model 200C, Model 300Listed on the Air Tindi site as 200 Catpass, B-200C and 350
Cessna 2084N/A208 Caravan, 208B Grand Caravan 7 and 9 passangers
de Havilland Canada DHC-3 Otter10Not listed at the Air Tindi website
de Havilland Canada DHC-6 Twin Otter5N/ASeries 30019 passengers
Dash 75N/ADHC-7-102, DHC-7-103 Combi aircraft, 46 passengers
Learjet 351N/A7 - 8 passengers

Accidents and incidents

On 4 October 2011, a Tindi owned Cessna Caravan en route from Yellowknife Airport to Lutselk'e Airport crashed about 25 km (16 mi) west of the community. There were, including the pilot, four people on the aircraft and two were reported killed. The condition of the two survivors was not disclosed but they had been sent to Stanton Territorial Hospital in Yellowknife.[12][13][14]

References

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Air Tindi.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, January 16, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.