The Telegram (St. John's)

Air Canada marks 80 years

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Meticulous­ly restored, the two-engine propeller plane with registrati­on CF-TCC is ready for the spotlight of flying across this great country of ours from now until the end of the month.

Festivitie­s kicked off in Vancouver Sept. 6 and the first leg of the journey was the next day to Kelowna and Calgary.

From there, depending on weather, the adventure continues with stops in Edmonton, Saskatoon, Regina, Winnipeg, Thunder Bay, Sudbury, Toronto, Ottawa, Halifax and Quebec City.

You can follow the 80th anniversar­y flight in real time by going to Flighttrac­ker.com and using the L-10A’S registrati­on number of CF-TCC.

The biggest public appearance is in Winnipeg Sept. 13 and 14 at the Royal Aviation Museum.

“It’s a privilege and honour to be one of the two pilots flying this beautiful, antique plane across the country,” said Toronto-based John Brennan, 55, who usually pilots 300-seat 767 jets for Air Canada.

“It’s real flying. There’s no autopilot and we fly everything VFR (visual flight rules, rather than instrument flight rules (IFR).”

Winnipeg-based and retired Gerry Norberg, 68, is the other pilot for the cross-country odyssey.

“The L-10A isn’t very fast with a cruising speed of 150 miles per hour,” said Norberg.

“When I retired from Air Canada eight years ago I was flying 777s with cruising speeds of 500 miles per hour. But it’s not about speed with the Lockheed. It’s about recreating the golden age of flying.”

The L-10A doing the birthday flight was in Trans-canada Air Lines service from 1937-39.

It was then sold to the Royal Canadian Air Force as part of the World War II effort.

During the next 40 years it was bought and sold numerous times and was discovered by a retired Air Canada employee at an air show in Texas, where it was painted white with its CFTCC registrati­on barely showing through.

The airline bought the aircraft back, restored it and housed it at the Royal Aviation Museum in Winnipeg with only brief flying stints to mark special occasions.

Air Canada is also celebratin­g its 80th birthday with airfare deals and new routes, such as Toronto-berlin, Vancouver-taipei and Montreal-casablanca.

 ?? AIR CANADA PHOTO ?? Air Canada’s 80-year-old L-10A is one of only three such planes still operationa­l in the world.
AIR CANADA PHOTO Air Canada’s 80-year-old L-10A is one of only three such planes still operationa­l in the world.

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