Skyway Enterprises

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Skyway Enterprises
IATA ICAO Callsign
KI SKZ SKYWAY-INC
Founded1981
HubsKISM,KMIA
Secondary hubsKSAV
Fleet size9
DestinationsMYNN, MYGF, MUGM, MUHA
HeadquartersKissimmee, Florida, USA

Skyway Enterprises is an American airline based in Kissimmee, Florida, USA. It operates domestic/international on demand cargo and passenger charter flights, as well as contract flights for FedEx, UPS, and Government.[1]

History[]

The airline was established in 1981 in Michigan as a Cessna dealership, and started operations with cargo charters in 1983. It moved operations to Kissimmee in 1989.

Fleet[]

Skyway Enterprises Shorts SD-360-100

As of December 2008 the Skyway Enterprises fleet includes:[2]

Skyway Enterprises Fleet
Aircraft In Fleet Notes
McDonnell Douglas DC-9-15F 1
Learjet 24D 1
Shorts SD3-60 7
Total 9

Accidents and incidents[]

  • 2 February 1998 - Two Skyway Enterprises Shorts 330-200 aircraft (N2630A and N2629Y) were damaged beyond repair by a tornado at Miami International Airport. Both aircraft had to be written off. No one was injured.[3]
  • 9 April 2003 - Skyway Enterprises Shorts 330-200 aircraft (N805SW), on a flight from Pittsburgh was about to land at DuBois Regional Airport, Pennsylvania, when an engine surged, the pilot attempted to go around again to land and crashed left of the runway. The aircraft was substantially damaged but the two crew survived.[3]
  • 29 October 2014 - Skyway Enterprises Flight 7101, a Shorts 360-200 aircraft (N380MQ), on a flight from Sint Maarten-Juliana Airport (SXM/TNCM), Netherlands Antilles to San Juan-Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport (SJU/TJSJ), Puerto Rico, crashed into the water off Sint Maarten-Juliana Airport shortly after takeoff from runway 28. There were 2 crews on board. The body of German national Eric Schnell (49), the pilot of the crashed plane, was discovered the night of the incident. Skyway co-pilot Rigoberto Lopez may still be strapped in his seat in the plane wreckage according to Wendell Thode, Coast Guard Acting Head and Head of Operation.[4][3]

References[]

  1. ^ Flight International 12–18 December 2008
  2. ^ Flight International, 3–9 December 2008
  3. ^ a b c Aviation Safety Network retrieved 26 November 2006
  4. ^ The Daily Herald [thedailyherald.com]

External links[]


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