Fly Air
Fly Air (Turkish: Fly Havayolu Taşımacılık A.Ş.) was a private airline based in Istanbul, Turkey. It was originally a charter airline, but also operated scheduled services.
| |||||||
Founded | 2002 | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ceased operations | 2007 | ||||||
Hubs | Atatürk International Airport | ||||||
Parent company | Fly Havayolu Taşımacılık A.Ş. | ||||||
Headquarters | Istanbul, Turkey | ||||||
Website | http://www.flyair.com.tr |
The airline ceased operations in January 2007.[1]
History
The airline was established and started operations in 2002 with holiday charter flights and added scheduled services in October 2003.[1] It was launched on the back of charter carrier Air Anatolia. Fly Air was the first charter airline in Turkey with domestic flights. The first domestic flight gained a lot of media coverage as the monopoly of Turkish Airlines was broken. Fly Air ceased operations after financial problems in 2007.
Destinations
Fly Air operated the following services until it ceased operations:
- Domestic scheduled destinations: Ankara, Antalya, Istanbul, İzmir, Northern Cyprus, Bodrum, Trabzon, Urfa and Mardin
- International scheduled destinations: Europe (Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, France, Switzerland, Spain, Italy, Poland), Tel Aviv, Yerevan, Khartoum, Tunis and Egypt.
gollark: I also had a server rack with a bunch of devices with linked cards (and wireless ones) relaying packets to remote locations, and under heavy load *that* apparently sometimes just crashes despite being connected to a several-kRF/t power supply.
gollark: OC's power requirements can also be annoying sometimes, because apparently my long-range communication relay cubes need something like 300RF/t in RTG capacity to avoid shutting down under heavy load.
gollark: The complexity limits are very low, and there are 2 card slots.
gollark: Yes, if it fits a wireless card.
gollark: CC could do with status lights and beeps, though.
References
- Flight International 3 April 2007
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.