Turku
Airport (Finland) receives Caravelle Monument
By
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Scandinavian Airlines (SAS) Sud SE-210
Caravelle III SE-DAF at Stockholm-Arlanda Airport © Alan Lebeda on Wikimedia
The plane from the time of the early jet
flight was parked at Stockholm Arlanda for 47 years. Now it gets a new home in
Turku – but still outdoors.
A 32-meter-long Caravelle, which began Finnish jet
travel in the 1960s, will be exhibited in Turku. The aircraft will be exhibited
at the southwestern exit from Turku Airport in connection with renovation work
at the terminal.
The plane is a French-made Sud Aviation SE210
Caravelle III aircraft that has been outdoors at Stockholm Arlanda Airport for
47 years. The plane is donated by the Swedish Maritime and Transport History
Museum.
The Caravelle is no longer airworthy, hence it must be
dismantled to be transported on a short distance of 160 kilometres. The plane
that originally flew for SAS will be renovated in Turku from next summer.
In the renovation, the plane will be repainted in
Finnair’s colours, which in the early ’60s were still quite spartan blue-grey.
Finnair adopted the aircraft type in the 1960s and
especially a later upgraded model, Super Caravelle, became for a few decades
the backbone of the company’s air traffic to the rest of Europe and especially
in the growing charter traffic to the Mediterranean.
The plane, which at Finnair could carry 82 passengers,
or 95 if the first class was abolished, was a pioneer in passenger comfort. The
plane also had a sensational maximum flight altitude of almost 13,000 metres.
The Caravelle will be the first large commercial
aircraft to be added to the collections at the Finnish Aviation Museum in over
35 years. Finnair stopped flying the aircraft type in 1983.
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