Conair Group

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Conair Aerial Firefighting.
Conair Logo.png
C-FDHX (21105236453).jpg
An Air Tractor AT-802
IATA ICAO Callsign
N/A FGD Fireguard
FoundedApril 1969
AOC #Canada:2626[1]
HubsAbbotsford International Airport
Fleet size59[2]
Parent companyConair Group Inc.
HeadquartersAbbotsford, British Columbia, Canada
Key peopleBarry Marsden (President & CEO)
Websitehttp://www.conair.ca/

Conair Group Inc. of Abbotsford, British Columbia, Canada, formerly known as Conair Aviation, is a company specializing in retrofitting firefighting aircraft, maintaining customer and company-owned aircraft and aerial firefighting. Conair currently[when?] employs over 250 staff and has a fleet of aircraft that are broken down into two categories; air attack (a.k.a. bird dog), and airtankers (a.k.a. waterbombers). Conair specializes in fire management support by providing services and products to forest protection agencies around the world. In 1996 Conair became a Canadian Air Tractor dealer for the AT-802F air tanker.[3] A former Conair Group division; Cascade Aerospace was acquired by the IMP Group of Halifax, Nova Scotia in 2012.

History[]

Convair CV580 Airtanker

The company was started by a consortium led by Les Kerr consisting of: Leslie George "Les" Kerr, K. Barry Marsden, Herman Joseph "Slim" Knights, Ronald "Ron" F. Connelly of Whitehorse, Yukon, and John De Voin (a silent partner). Les Kerr had worked for Skyway Air Services for seventeen years and put together the five man group to take control of the fire control and aerial agricultural interests of Skyway. In the transaction, they took 35 employees and 19 single engine aircraft. This took place after the owner for Skyway (Art Seller), had suffered a stroke and wanted to eliminate some of his workload.

Skyway Air Services was started shortly after the close of WW2. They were pioneers in the development and operation of aerial firefighting, agricultural and pest control spraying. After the interests were sold, Skyway continued to operate as a flying school and charter business out of Langley, British Columbia.

The new company was called Conair Aviation Ltd. and was incorporated in April 1969, receiving their operating license on October 22, 1969. As part of the deal, the aircraft and assets that Conair purchased were: thirteen Grumman Avengers, five Boeing Stearmans, one North American Harvard and the existing Skyway hangar located at Abbotsford, British Columbia.

In 1978 Conair acquired a subsidiary; Frontier Helicopters based at Watson Lake, Yukon. This rotary division was renamed Conair Helicopters in 1999. Conair also went into the Air Cargo business in 1980 by starting a company named Swiftair Cargo. They filed for license in early July 1979, and flew for the first time on September 15, 1980 using two Douglas DC-8 aircraft flying in opposite directions across Canada. Swiftair Cargo went into receivership by May 1982.[4]

By 1984 Conair had the world's largest private fleet of Air Tankers including 50 fixed wing aircraft and 15 helicopters and by the early 1990s has grown to over 90 aircraft. Conair Aviation Ltd. later became Conair Group Inc., and they continue to be based out of Abbotsford, British Columbia.[5][6][7]

Fleet[]

As of December 2020, according to Transport Canada the Conair Group fleet numbers 59 aircraft.[2]

Conair Group fleet
Aircraft Number Variants Notes
Aero Commander 690 9 Commander 690, Commander 690A, Commander 690B Bird dog, listed at Conair as Turbo Commander TC-690A[8] and one listed by Transport Canada as a Rockwell 690A
Air Tractor AT-802 23 AT-802, AT-802A Air Tanker, nine of which have amphibious scooping capability. Listed at the Conair site as the Air Tractor AT802 Amphib, Air Tractor 802AF and F[9][10]
Avro RJ85 3 Avro RJ85 Jet air tanker, listed at Conair as the Avro RJ85 AT[11]
Canadair CL-215 4 CL-215T Turboprop powered air tanker with scooping capability, listed at Conair as the Canadair CL215T[12]
Cessna 208 Caravan 6 208B Grand Caravan Bird dog, listed at Conair as Cessna Caravan C208B[13]
Cessna CitationJet 1 Cessna 525 Bird dog, listed at Conair as the Citation Jet C525[14]
Convair CV-240 family 9 Convair CV-340, Convair CV-440 Air tanker. All CV-340 and CV-440 were converted into the CV-580 turboprop. Listed at Conair as Convair CV580[15]
De Havilland Canada Dash 8 3 DHC-8-402 Air tanker[16]
Lockheed L-188 Electra 1 L-188A Turboprop air tanker

In addition there is a Cessna 185 listed by Transport Canada with a cancelled certificate.[17]

The Dash 8 were originally two used Bombardier Dash 8 Q400s, acquired from Scandinavian Airlines System, that were modified by the Conair Group's former[18] division Cascade Aerospace of Abbotsford, British Columbia. These aircraft are set up for dual roles and were modified for the Sécurité Civile to act both as fire-fighting water bombers in fire season and as civilian or cargo transport aircraft in the off season. This aircraft is designated the Q400-MR (Multi Role). The aircraft can be reconfigured into the passenger, cargo or aerial fire control role in under three hours and can drop 10,000 L (2,200 imp gal; 2,600 US gal)in the tanker role.[19]

Conair also previously converted three Fokker F27 Friendship turboprops for use as air tankers.[20]

In January 2021, Conair announced that it had purchased 11 Q400s from defunct British airline Flybe for conversion into Q400AT and Q400MR configurations.[21]

Air attack[]

Piper Aerostar "bird dog" parked beside a Convair 580 air tanker

Conair's air attack aircraft, more commonly known as "bird dogs", are aircraft that contain the pilot and Air Attack Officer. The bird dogs ensure the runs to be made by the laden airtankers are safe and free of obstructions. The crew inside the bird dog determine the run locations and drop types to be made, coordinate the aerial action with the ground crews if present and control the airspace around the fire. These aircraft are always used in conjunction with the airtankers.

Former attack aircraft include the Cessna T210, Cessna Skymaster T337 and the piston 337 and Piper Aerostars,[22] since superseded by Aero Commanders, Cessna 208 Caravans and Cessna CitationJet.

Air tankers[]

Conair's tankers include Air Tractor AT-802F, and AT-802F Amphibious "Fireboss" variants, Convair CV580s, Lockheed L188 Electra, and Canadair CL-215s. Conair's headquarters are in Abbotsford at the Abbotsford International Airport which also is where their maintenance and retrofitting facility is located. Conair bases their aircraft under contract to fire control agencies throughout western Canada and the United States. Currently, Conair airtanker groups (a group consists of one birddog and from one to four airtankers) are contracted to agencies in BC, Alberta, Yukon and Alaska. Conair serves as the Canadian dealer for Air Tractor of Olney, Texas, which produces the AT-802F, one of only three types of aircraft specifically designed for aerial firefighting (the others being the Canadair CL-415 and 215 models).

Former air tankers include Conair Firecats (retrofitted S-2 Trackers) and Douglas DC-6s.[22]

Accidents and incidents[]

References[]

  1. ^ Transport Canada (December 27, 2020), Civil Aviation Services (CAS) AOC. wwwapps.tc.gc.ca.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b "Canadian Civil Aircraft Register: Quick Search Result for Conair". Transport Canada. Retrieved December 27, 2020.
  3. ^ [1] Archived 2016-02-12 at the Wayback Machine Conair Group
  4. ^ "Swiftair, Canada's only all-cargo national airline, was placed in..." UPI. Retrieved February 22, 2016.
  5. ^ Art Seller and Skyway Air Services
  6. ^ Conair - About
  7. ^ "BC Aviation Hall of Fame". www.bcaviation.com. Retrieved February 22, 2016.
  8. ^ Turbo Commander TC-690A
  9. ^ Air Tractor AT802 Amphib
  10. ^ Air Tractor AT802
  11. ^ Avro RJ85 AT
  12. ^ Canadair CL215T
  13. ^ Cessna Caravan C208B
  14. ^ Citation Jet C525
  15. ^ Convair CV580
  16. ^ Q400MR and Q400AT
  17. ^ Canadian Civil Aircraft Register: Aircraft Details C-GZSH
  18. ^ "Abbotsford's Cascade Aerospace sold to Nova Scotia company". www.vancouversun.com. Retrieved February 27, 2016.
  19. ^ "Q400MR Airtanker - Conair Aerial Firefighting". conair.ca. Retrieved February 27, 2016.
  20. ^ http://www.airliners.net, photos of Conair Fokker F27 aircraft
  21. ^ Kaminski-Morrow, David (January 16, 2021). "Flybe Q400s to be converted into firefighters for Conair". Flight Global.
  22. ^ Jump up to: a b Canadian Civil Aircraft Register: History Search Result
  23. ^ "Firefighting Plane Crash in Canada Kills Two". CBS News. AP. August 1, 2010. Retrieved April 20, 2016.

External links[]

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