Delta Air Transport
Delta Air Transport was an airline headquartered in Antwerp, Belgium, operating scheduled and chartered flights, mostly on short-haul routes. It served a multitude of regional European destinations on behalf of Sabena during the 1990s and early 2000s.
History
Delta Air Transport was founded in 1966, by Frans Van den Bergh, as a provider for air taxi and charter flight services with an initial fleet of three Cessna aircraft. DAT's first scheduled flight from Antwerp to Amsterdam on behalf of KLM took place on 19 September 1967; for that purpose two Beechcraft Queen Air feederliners had been acquired.arrives at Amsterdam Schiphol Airport in June 1972 on a scheduled service from Antwerp Airport.
Operations grew when the larger Douglas DC-3 and DC-6 joined the fleet over the following years, allowing DAT to operate charter flights on behalf of KLM, Sabena, Crossair and BIAS. In 1973, the majority of the airline's stake was bought by Compagnie Maritime Belge. During 1974, a Boeing 720 was leased, allowing DAT to offer worldwide charter flights, which soon turned out to be unsuccessful, though.
In 1986, Sabena acquired a 49 percent stake in DAT, and an increasing number of flights were operated on behalf of the Belgian national airline henceforth, using a fleet of British Aerospace 146 aircraft, in favor of which other airliners were gradually phased out. DAT became a member of the European Regional Airlines Association in 1993. In 1996, Sabena bought the remaining KLM stake, thus DAT became a wholly owned Sabena subsidiary, moved its headquarters from Antwerp to Brussels and was re-branded as DAT Belgian Regional Airline, offering low-cost flights. Gradually, the livery of Sabena was applied to all DAT aircraft.
On 1 November 2001, Sabena collapsed due to financial difficulties. DAT could re-launch its operations on 10 November with a flight to Geneva, having received all of Sabena's slots at Brussels Airport and thus being able to maintain the successful European network. Freddy Van Gaever, its former CEO, planned to merge DAT with Virgin Express and add flights to the United States using former Sabena aircraft, which was why the new DAT Plus branding was adopted. Actually, DAT came under the umbrella of SN Airholding in 2002, and was re-organized under a new AOC as SN Brussels Airlines, which later became Brussels Airlines, today's flag carrier of the country.
Destinations
In its early years, Delta Air Transport offered up to 4 daily scheduled flights between its then base at Antwerp Airport and Amsterdam Airport Schiphol on behalf of KLM, as well as a limited number of routes to the neighboring countries. During the 1990s and early 2000s, DAT was able to grow an extensive short-haul network, as more and more flights were operated on behalf of demising Sabena, eventually becoming the 10th largest regional airline of the continent, transporting more than 1.7 million passengers per year. During its height, the airline had nearly 800 employees, and served the following cities on a scheduled basis from its hub at Brussels Airport:;Austria
- Vienna
- Sofia
- Zagreb
- Prague
- Copenhagen
- Helsinki
- Bordeaux
- Paris
- Lyon
- Marseille
- Nice
- Strasbourg
- Toulouse
- Berlin
- Düsseldorf
- Frankfurt
- Hamburg
- Hanover
- Munich
- Stuttgart
- Athens
- Budapest
- Dublin
- Bologna
- Florence
- Milan
- Naples
- Rome
- Turin
- Venice
- Luxembourg
- Amsterdam
- Oslo
- Warsaw
- Lisbon
- Porto
- Bucharest
- Barcelona
- Bilbao
- Madrid
- Málaga
- Seville
- Valencia
- Gothenburg
- Stockholm
- Basel
- Geneva
- Zurich
- Birmingham
- Bristol
- Edinburgh
- Glasgow
- Leeds
- London
- Manchester
- Newcastle
of Delta Air Transport at Stuttgart Airport in 1988.
Fleet
Over the years, Delta Air Transport operated the following aircraft types:Aircraft | Introduced | Retired |
Aérospatiale N 262 | ||
Beechcraft Queen Air | ||
Boeing 720 | ||
British Aerospace 146 | ||
Cessna 206 | ||
Cessna 210 | ||
Cessna Skymaster | ||
Convair CV-440 | ||
Dash 8-300 | ||
Douglas DC-3 | ||
Douglas DC-4 | ||
Douglas DC-6 | ||
Douglas DC-8 | ||
Embraer EMB 120 Brasilia | ||
Fairchild Hiller FH-227 | ||
Fairchild Swearingen Metroliner | ||
Fokker F28 Fellowship |
Accidents and incidents
- On 4 October 1974 at 20:01 local time, the flight engineer of a DAT Douglas DC-6 decided to retract the nose gear during take-off run at London Southend Airport even though the aircraft had not yet lifted off, which happened due to a communication error with the pilots. The airplane slid along the runway, during which it was damaged beyond repair. 99 passengers had been on board the flight to Antwerp, one of which was severely injured. The six crew members remained uninjured.
- On 2 June 1990 at 19:11 local time, a DAT Embraer EMB 120 Brasilia without any passengers collided with a Piper Aerostar during a low-pass maneuvre at Antwerp International Airport, resulting in the crash of the Piper and the death of the four people on board. The two aircraft had been performing a close formation flight for aerial photographs of the DAT Embraer for advertising purposes.