Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

Vistajet

Vistajet
IATA ICAO Call sign
5V VJT VISTA
FoundedApril 1997 (1997-04)
Ceased operationsSeptember 1997 (1997-09)
Operating basesWindsor International Airport
Fleet size3
HeadquartersWindsor, Ontario, Canada

Vistajet (never stylized VistaJet) was a Canadian low-cost airline based in Windsor, Ontario established in April 1997. Vistajet operated a fleet of leased Boeing 737-200 aircraft, but the airline ceased operations in September 1997, due to lower than expected passenger traffic.[1]

History

One of the Boeing 737-200 leased by Vistajet, operating for Viscount Air, 1995

Vistajet, based in Windsor, Ontario, entered the eastern Canada market in April 1997 as a low-cost carrier, but ceased operations in September 1997 due to lower than expected passenger traffic.[1] The company planned to become a national carrier offering value-conscious leisure and business travelers the convenience of flying at a rate comparable to driving or taking the train.

The Globe & Mail reported that a consultant's report prepared for the board of Air Canada suggests that the premier airline in Canada was able to force out new competitors such as Vistajet by lowering prices and adding capacity during the 1990s.

Services

The airline operated services to Calgary, Winnipeg, Thunder Bay, Halifax, Ottawa, Toronto and Windsor.

Fleet

Vistajet operated a fleet consisting of Boeing 737-200 jetliners. The aircraft were leased.[2]

Vistajet fleet
Aircraft Number Passengers
(Economy)
Notes
Boeing 737-200 3 ? Aircraft were leased

Livery

Vistajet's aircraft were primarily painted in white, except for the tail, logo, and horizontal stripe on the fuselage.

The fuselage had the Vistajet logo printed in between the boarding door and the overwing exit, above the windows. Below the windows, there was a stripe that was divided into two colours, black at the top and maroon at the bottom.

The tail of the aircraft was primarily painted in maroon, with a white arc from the middle-left of the tail to the bottom-right of the tail.[3]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Sharpe, Mike (2001). Boeing 737-100 and 200. MBI Publishing Company. ISBN 9780760309919. Retrieved 2 September 2018.
  2. ^ "Vistajet fleet details and history". planespotters.net. Retrieved 2 September 2018.
  3. ^ "C-GVJB - Boeing B-737-291A - Vistajet at Toronto Lester B. Pearson Airport (YYZ) in summer 1997". Flickr. Retrieved 2 September 2018.