This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
| |||||||
Founded | September 1940 | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fleet size | 4 | ||||||
Destinations | 30 | ||||||
Headquarters | El Palomar, Buenos Aires, Argentina | ||||||
Website | lade.faa.mil.ar |
LADE - Líneas Aéreas del Estado (English: State Air Lines) is an airline based in Comodoro Rivadavia, Argentina owned by the Argentine state and operated by the Argentine Air Force. It provides domestic scheduled services, mainly in Patagonia.
The airline was established as an arm of the Argentine Air Force in September 1940 to service unprofitable routes to remote areas.[1] It was initially known as Líneas Aéreas Suroeste and consolidated under the present title in 1945 with another air force branch, Líneas Aéreas Noreste.[2] By April 1960 , DC-3s, DC-4s and Vikings made up LADE's fleet.[1]
At March 1970, LADE had 150 employees and its fleet consisted of 14 DC-3s, two DC-4s, three DC-6s and six Twin Otters.[4] The carrier started regular flights between Comodoro Rivadavia and the Falkland Islands in 1972.[5][6] The Comodoro Rivadavia–Port Stanley run was initially operated with F.27 equipment. The limited length of the runway at Port Stanley Airport resulted in weight regulations to the aircraft operating the route, which restricted the number of carried passengers to a maximum of 22 per flight, along with a reduced volume of mail and freight.[7] The service was discontinued in 1982,[5] following the Falklands War.[8][9]
At July 1980Fokker F.28-1000Cs and seven Twin Otters.[6] Ten years later, at March 1990 , the fleet had grown to include five Fokker F.28-1000Cs, 13 F.27s —six -400Ms, two -500s and five -600s—, one Lockheed L-100-30 and seven Twin Otters.[10] At March 2004,[update] LADE served a comprehensive domestic network that included scheduled services to Bahía Blanca, Buenos Aires, Comodoro Rivadavia, El Calafate, El Palomar, Gobernador Gregores, Lago Argentino, Mar del Plata, Miramar, Neuquén, Paraná, Puerto Madryn, Río Gallegos, Río Grande, San Antonio Oeste, San Carlos de Bariloche, San Martín de los Andes, Trelew, Ushuaia and Viedma. The fleet at this time consisted of Twin Otters, Fokker F27s, Fokker F28s and one Lockheed L-100-30 Hercules.[11] From December 2008 four Saab 340s replaced four Fokker F27s at a cost of US$34 million.[12][13]
, the airline had a fleet of 11 F.27s —five -600s and six -400Ms—, fiveLADE–Líneas Aéreas del Estado operates services to the following domestic scheduled destinations (at June 2019):[14]
The LADE - Líneas Aéreas del Estado fleet consists of the following aircraft (as of April 2021[update])[1] [2]
Those aircraft are for regular flights.
The air force cargo fleet is leased by LADE, consisting of:
Two surviving Lockheed Martin C-130B Hercules were retired by the air force in 2011, while the sole Lockheed Martin L-100-30 Hercules has been inoperative since early 2010.
There is a Presidential Fleet which is normally not assigned to LADE:
The rest of the fleet is inoperative:
As of June 2012[update] nearly all flights were operated by Saab 340 aircraft, with the Fokker F28 fleet flying exclusively for the air force. Fokker F27s were withdrawn from the LADE schedules in April 2009, although they have since been known to operate LADE flights now and again.[citation needed]
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (November 2016) |
Date | Location | Aircraft | Tail number | Aircraft damage | Fatalities | Description | Refs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
16 June 1995 | Jeremie | F-27-400M | TC-73 | W/O | 0 | Collapse of left main landing gear on touchdown at Jeremie Airport. The aircraft ran off the runway and crashed into a building. | [15] |
8 November 1995 | Villa Dolores | F-27-400M | TC-72 | W/O | 53/53 | Crashed into mountainous terrain in bad weather while flying the last leg of a domestic non-scheduled Comodoro Rivadavia–Villa Reynolds–Córdoba. | [16] |