Odin Air

Odin Air
IATA ICAO Call sign
5H ODI ODINN
Founded1964 (1964)
Ceased operations1998 (1998)

Odin Air was an Icelandic airline which was based in Reykjavík Airport in Reykjavík, which operated from 1964 to 1998.

History

Founded in 1964, Helgi Jonossonar Air Taxi was a charter airline and flew the Piper PA-23 Apache and Piper Navajo to Denmark and other airports in Iceland. It was founded by the owners of the renowned Flugskoli Helga Jonsonnar. Their first flight was operated by TF-AIB, a Cessna 140.

In 1989 it rebranded as Odin Air, and bought three Handley Page Jetstream.

It flew to more remote parts of Iceland and carried passengers and cargo across Iceland in the 1960s. This continued into the 70s and flew charter flights across Iceland.

In 1989, the airline finally decided to operate scheduled flights and abandon taxi flights across the rough gravel and snow. The airline bought three Jetstream aircraft, (TF-ODI,TF-ODM and TF-ODN) and bought more aircraft with more capacity.

In the 90s, the airline flew across the country doing scheduled flights. They also occasionally flew to the United States.

However, by 1997, Odin Air couldn't compete with the likes of Air Iceland Connect, Icelandair, and Loftleiðir. These renowned airlines had more trust, fleet, and money.

As a result, Odin Air was no longer profitable and by 1998, was officially declared no longer operational by the Icelandic Air Agencies.

Fleet

Current fleet

As of 1998, Odin Air operated the following aircraft.

Odin Air Fleet
Aircraft In service Orders Passengers Notes
Handley Page Jetstream
Total 3
Mitshubishi MU-2 "TF-FHM"
Total 3 TF-FHM,TF-FHL,TF-FHJ

Former fleet

Prior to 1991, Odin Air operated the following aircraft types:[1]

Aircraft Total Introduced Retired Replacement Notes
Piper PA-23 "TF-BAA" 1 1964 1989 Handley Page Jetstream TF-BAA.
Piper Navajo 1 1965 1989 Handley Page Jetstream TF-ODE.
Cessna 140 1 1964 1964 Piper PA-23 Apache

See also

List of defunct airlines of Iceland List of airlines of Iceland

References

  1. ^ "Odin Air Photo Archive". Retrieved 24 December 2009.