African Pilot

DC-3 in Columbia

On 8 July 2021, a Douglas DC-3 registered as HK-2820 of Aliansa went missing in Colombia. The aircraft disappeare­d from radar five minutes after taking off for a training flight and was found in a riverbed.

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The DC-3 is a WW2-vintage aircraft. In fact, the crashed one was built either in 1943 or 1944 (depending on the source) and may have very well participat­ed in the closing actions of the war, before being sold off by the US Air Force in the 50s. Some might remember that in 2019 Colombia already had a prominent incident involving a DC-3, an aircraft, built in 1945 crashed killing 14 people. Later that year, the same DC-3 of Aliansa was damaged in a runway excursion. In total, according to the Aviation Safety Network, the country had eight accidents involving the type in the last decade, not including the ones that remained unreported.

How come Colombia has so many accidents involving vintage aircraft?

The reason, obviously, is that Colombia has many of these vintage aircraft. Before 8 July, Aliansa alone operated four of them, not including three more that crashed since the airline commenced operations in 1995. According to Steve Hide, a journalist who had a chance to experience the Colombian DC-3 culture a few years ago it is virtually impossible to establish how many aircraft of this type are operated in the country. By any estimate, it is dozens.

The DC-3 itself is quite definitely the only war-time aircraft that is flown around the world in a significan­t number. According to the DC-3 Appreciati­on Society, because such a group obviously exists there were 172 aircraft of this type in active operation in mid-2020. The number of airworthy examples is estimated at over 600, although it is impossible to say for sure. A part of this number belongs to enthusiast­s (mostly in the US and Canada) who operate the historic aircraft, flying them at airshows and trying to preserve an important part of aviation history. But another significan­t part is commercial operators: companies, such as Aliansa, fly them because, well, there is no alternativ­e.

Colombian police DC-3

A turboprop-converted DC-3 belonging to Colombian police. Private companies are not the only ones operating this aircraft; in fact, just hours after the DC-3 crash on 8 July, a Colombian Air Force DC-3 was circling in the region, possibly as a part of the search effort. The aircraft has a number of crucial advantages that are well known to anybody who ever came in contact with it. It is sturdy and reliable; it is easy and not too expensive to fly; it is simple to maintain and, thanks to the fact that many were manufactur­ed, there is a steady stream of spare parts, even though the production stopped in 1950. It also can land on short and unprepared runways, basically being a bush plane in an airliner form.

A result of that is a sort of ‘DC-3 culture’ that formed around the aircraft in countries that are in dire need of connecting geographic­ally distant population centres through the air, mostly in South America. Colombia is a hotspot of that culture. In 2018, Al Jazeera filmed a short documentar­y about it, highlighti­ng the romanticis­m and above all the danger of flying vintage planes in tropical conditions of the country.

The underside of such dangerous operations is the high toll they take. With the latest crash, more than half of Aliansa’s fleet have already perished in fatal accidents in the span of twoand-a-half decades.There is a well-known saying among the enthusiast­s of the plane; ‘the only replacemen­t for a DC-3 is another DC-3’, as no other aircraft can take on the job. Outskirts of small Colombian airports usually house several non-operationa­l DC-3s with the explicit purpose of being cannibalis­ed. Neverthele­ss, at that rate, the country is going to run out of the type sooner or later.

To be fair, retirement is a thing that does not really apply to the DC-3. Most of the operating aircraft of this type have already been retired at one point or another, only to be sold off and proceed with further operations. Neverthele­ss, as no new DC-3s have been manufactur­ed in over seven decades and the existing ones do not multiply, from time to the tragic time they must be replaced by something. It appears old Antonov aircraft, mostly the An-24 and its derivative­s are pretty much the only aircraft that can take on the role. The ex-Soviet planes have already establishe­d their reputation in Africa, proving to be reliable, simple to maintain and well-suited to extreme climates. It is only a question of time before the Colombian routes operated by DC-3s from the 40s will be replaced by Antonov types from the 60s and 70s. A small upgrade, but an interestin­g and unpreceden­ted one. https://www.aerotime.aero/28348-Why-Colombia-still-loves-DouglasDC-3s?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email

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