Dominicana de Aviación

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Dominicana de Aviación
DominicanaAirlines-logo.JPG
IATA ICAO Callsign
DO DOA DOMINICANA
FoundedMay 4, 1944
Ceased operations1999 (inactive since 1995)
HubsLas Américas International Airport
Secondary hubsGregorio Luperón International Airport
Focus cities
Destinations19 (At time of closing)
HeadquartersSanto Domingo, Dominican Republic
Websiteinstagram.com/dominicanadeaviacion

Compañía Dominicana de Aviación, usually shortened to Dominicana, was an airline from the Dominican Republic, serving as flag carrier of the country.

History[]

A Dominicana Douglas DC-6B freighter of Dominicana at Miami International Airport in 1975

Dominicana was established in 1944 in an effort to create a national airline aiming at the large number of Dominican citizens who emigrated to the United States, Puerto Rico and Spain. The initial fleet consisted of the Douglas C-47 and DC-6. During the 1950s, Dominicana launched a domestic route network to places such as Puerto Plata, La Romana and Santiago de los Caballeros, acquiring Curtiss C-46 Commando and Aviation Traders Carvair airplanes. In the 1960s, Dominicana renewed its fleet with the Douglas DC-8, McDonnell Douglas DC-9 and Boeing 727. The route network was further expanded, with more destinations in the Americas and the Caribbean during the 1970s. At its height in the 1980s, Dominicana operated the Boeing 747 to European destinations like Madrid, Milan, and Frankfurt.

At the end of the decade, the airline's economic situation worsened due to poor management, lack of innovation or cost-cutting culture, and the heavy maintenance costs of its aging fleet. More importantly, on the revenue side, government employees also sought to fly non-revenue, given the typical patronage in the Dominican Republic with many flights full of them often displacing paying passengers. Subsequently, the fleet and network were scaled back, leaving only the original routes like New York, Miami, Caracas, and San Juan. In an effort to save on maintenance costs, Dominicana began to operate leased aircraft (mostly Boeing 727s and also Airbus A300s). The financial situation further worsened into the 1990s, which coincided with a negative customer reputation (like lost or delayed luggage as well as unreliable schedules). In 1994, now also faced with Cat1 restrictions in the US, Dominicana wet-leased a Boeing 737-300 and a Boeing 757-200 from Mexican low-cost airline TAESA. Further aircraft were wet-leased from Express One International, Atlantic Aviation and Carnival Air Lines. During Christmas of 1994, many Dominicana VFR passengers were stranded at JFK, MIA, and SJU when the airline was unable to provide necessary funding to lessors for heavily-booked Christmas flights (and, overbooked for the B727 the lessors were providing, since an A300 had been expected to be wet-leased). As a consequence of the outrage, in early 1995 the government of the Dominican Republic decided to shut down the airline. While the shutdown was originally only planned as a temporary measure to get re-organized, the company never became operational again. The vice president at the time was quoted saying that "Dominicans can fly APA Internacional" which was another "local" airline that benefited handsomely from Dominicana's demise. While several attempts have been made to privatize the airline, no efforts came to fruition. American Airlines and later JetBlue dominated the market and the business case for a new Dominican flag carrier is relatively weak given the investment that would be required and the debts that would have to be honored in order to use the Dominicana name.[1]

Destinations[]

A Dominicana Boeing 727-100 taxiing at John F. Kennedy International Airport in 1985
A Dominicana Boeing 707-320C at Miami International Airport in 1989

Fleet[]

Over the years, Dominicana operated the following aircraft types:[2][3][4]

Dominicana fleet
Aircraft Total Introduced Retired Notes
Airbus A300B4 3 1992 1993 Leased from Conair of Scandinavia
ATL-98A 2 1969 1978 One written off as Flight 401
Boeing 707-320 1 1971 1972 Leased from Pan Am
Boeing 707-320C 1 1972 1972 Leased from Pan Am
1 1984 1994
Boeing 720B 1 1980 1981 Leased from
Boeing 727-100 5 1972 1994
Boeing 727-200 9 1975 1999
Boeing 737-400 1 1994 Un­known Wet leased from TAESA
Boeing 747-100 1 1985 1987
Boeing 757-200 1 1994 Un­known Wet leased from TAESA
Curtiss C-46 Commando 8 1948 1969
Douglas C-47 Skytrain 4 1947 1974
Douglas C-54 Skymaster 2 1958 1977
Douglas DC-4 1 1973 1975
Douglas DC-6B 4 1962 1994
Douglas DC-8-43 2 1978 1981
Lockheed L-188C Electra 1 1970 1971 Leased from American Flyers Airline
McDonnell Douglas DC-9-15 1 1968 1970 Leased from McDonnell Douglas
McDonnell Douglas DC-9-32 1 1969 Written off in an accident
McDonnell Douglas DC-10-10 1 1984 1985 Leased from Arrow Air
McDonnell Douglas DC-10-30 1 1995 1996 Leased from TAESA
McDonnell Douglas DC-10-40 1 1984 1984

Livery[]

The most common Dominicana livery consisted of a metallic silver fuselage, with red and blue cheatlines going all the way from the cockpit to the tail painting,[5] representing the colors in the Dominican flag. The Dominicana titles were written in black letters above the passenger windows.

Accidents and incidents[]

  • On 17 July 1958 at 10:16 UTC, a Curtiss C-46 Commando aircraft (registered HI-16) operating Dominicana Flight 402 from Ciudad Trujillo (today's Santo Domingo) to Miami crashed shortly after take-off due to an engine problem, killing the two pilots on board.[7]
  • On 23 June 1969 at 15:42 local time, a Dominicana Aviation Traders Carvair aircraft (registered HI-168), which was operating Flight 401 from Miami to Santo Domingo, crashed shortly after take-off from Miami International Airport, killing all four persons on board, as well as six people on the ground. The aircraft had suffered an engine failure during take-off run, on which the pilots were not able to react accordingly.[8][9]
  • On 5 September 1993, a Dominicana Boeing 727-200 (registered HI-617CA) was destroyed in a fire at Las Américas Airport. The then 20 years old aircraft had been operating a scheduled flight from San Juan to Santo Domingo carrying 98 passengers and 7 crew members, when the cabin filled with smoke during disembarkation, which was caused by a fire due to electrical overheating. All people involved managed to leave the aircraft before it was completely engulfed by the flames.[11]

References[]

  1. ^ List of airlines of the Dominican Republic at airlineupdate.com Archived 2013-06-18 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Amateur Dominicana de Aviacion Historic Fleet listing
  3. ^ Amateur Dominicana fleet listing (newer aircraft only) at airfleets.net
  4. ^ "Dominicana fleet". aerobernie.bplaced.net. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
  5. ^ https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f4/Boeing_727-173C%2C_Dominicana_de_Aviacion_JP5920044.jpg
  6. ^ Dominicana 1948 crash at the Aviation Safety Network
  7. ^ 1958 Dominicana crash at the Aviation Safety Network
  8. ^ Dominicana Flight 402 at the Aviation Safety Network
  9. ^ Flight 401 Official NTSB Accident Report
  10. ^ Dominicana 1970 crash at the Aviation Safety Network
  11. ^ Dominicana 1993 incident at the Aviation Safety Network

External links[]

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