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Helicopters Magazine Careers in Aviation
Civilian Air Freighters

Canada's workhorses are in for the long haul

Written by Fred Petrie   
392-freight









This is the third in a series on the aircraft that carry the freight. In the March/April 2006 issue we looked at Canada’s military airlift requirements, and in the July/August 2006 issue we dealt with the giant freighters plying international all-cargo routes. This article reports on civilian air freighters in Canada.


This report looks at southern and northern operations, each using large jets – greater than 50,000 lbs payload – and at the turboprops hauling 10,000+ lbs that typically feed to the jet freighters. Keeping to the day-in, day-out haulers, we will leave out some big charter operators like Nolinor’s CV- 580s, Voyageur’s Dash 7s and 8s, Arctic Sunwest’s Buffalo freighters (my favourite!) and anomalies like Buffalo Airways’ DC-4s and Curtiss Commando C-46s.

In large jets, the fleets of Canadian operators are dominated by the B727-200 (even First Air has finally parted with its -100 models, the only B727 certified for gravel runways). There are 41 B727-200s on the Canadian Civil Aircraft Register, operated by five carriers; 36 are operated as freighters. The largest operators are CargoJet and Kelowna Flightcraft with 14 and 15 respectively; Morningstar has four and First Air has three. As a sideline, KF and CargoJet also operate two each as VIP charters.

The Boeing 737 is a distant second as a freighter; First Air has three, inherited in its purchase of Northwest Territorial, and Canadian North has four, along with five all-passenger models. Most of these are combi models that were purchased new in the early 1970s by regional carriers like Nordair and Transair; their claim to fame in today’s air freighter market is their gravel-runway capability. The one other large freighter in domestic service is First Air’s Hercules, recently joined by a second. It does specialized charter work in support of mining developments, and is often at work overseas.

Most of the B727s are used in the southern east-west market with KF operating for Purolator, Morningstar for Fedex and CargoJet for UPS and DHL as well as for general freight customers.

Air Canada must be mentioned because it recently got back into the all-cargo market with the ACMI (aircraft-crewmaintenance- insurance) lease of three MD11s. However, it is not allowed to provide any domestic services with these aircraft due to antiquated Canadian Transportation Agency regulations. Even though Air Canada pays for them by the hour, and takes all of the commercial risk, they are considered ‘foreign’ and any freight between Canadian points would be ‘cabotage’!

The turboprop sector is like the jet sector in that the Hawker-Siddeley 748 dominates the freighter fleets, with the Convair 580 also in significant numbers. The major operators of the HS748 are Calm Air with six, Wasaya and First Air with five, and Air North and Air Inuit with four apiece; Air Creebec has one. There are actually 30 Convairs on the Canadian register but only 10 are freighters, eight in the Kelowna Flightcraft-Purolator network and two of Nolinor’s seven are in cargo configuration; the greater number of Convairs are used as firefighters, 10 with Conair and two with the Saskatchewan government. The main reason for the Hawker’s greater use as a freighter is that it can get into the 3,500-ft northern gravel strips while the Convair needs 5,000 ft for gravel runway operations. Both the B727 and the Hawkers have given long and useful service, but they each have drawbacks. The B727 has three engines burning expensive fuel and three crew. The Hawker has a life-cycle limit, drawing closer for many, and its Dart engines are getting more difficult to service. So what aircraft are on the horizon that might replace these workhorses? We went to the industry to ask.

Ajay Virmani, CargoJet’s CEO, explained how the B727 will be a mainstay for many years yet. Most of CargoJet’s B727s are ‘newer,’ as in only 25 years old. “The B727 is good for 60,000 cycles and ours average only 30,000; at 100 hours a month average utilization, it will be another 20 years or more before they technically wear out.” Certainly, the newer more fuel-efficient engines would be nice but the cost difference cannot be justified. I asked about the newer B737s. After noting that the - 200 model of the B727, in tonnes of payload per engine, is more efficient than the B737-200, Virmani told me that a good B737-300, never mind the latest -700s or -800s, still commands a price of $14 million. As Barry Lapointe of Kelowna Flightcraft also explained, one can put a lot of gas into a B727 for that difference in cost. I did a rough calculation of a difference of $1,000 an hour. As for the extra crew member, Lapointe reminded me that second officers are an entry-level position (i.e., junior pilots are cheap).

Nevertheless, Virmani advised me, fleets would see new aircraft in three to five years, even while many of the B727s continue to operate. The B757 and B767 are the most likely contenders. UPS operates B757s as package freighters despite their low utilization in the integrator role where the premium rates make up the difference; the common fuselage section makes the containers compatible with the B727 fleet, saving handling. The B767 is a widebody with a larger cube but uses different containers so either need repacking or waste cubic space. On the other hand, the B767 has the legs to fly international sectors which provides an opportunity to increase utilization to justify higher capital costs. Looking at freighter aircraft as simply so much capacity, Virmani estimated a fleet of eight B767s would cost $170 million; the same capacity could be provided with 12 B727s at a cost of $30 million. Virmani bought his newer B727s at the right price after 9/11; he seems content to wait until the next-generation aircraft come down to the right price as well. And he predicts that as more B777s and B787s and A330s arrive in world carrier fleets, the cost of B757s and B767s will become more affordable for cargo operators. In the meantime, CargoJet’s international services will be limited to shorter hauls like its new service to Bermuda, and in being a feeder to 22 international alliance carriers.

As for northern jet operators First Air and Canadian North, their needs are dictated by their combination markets of passengers and freight. Both use the B737 in combination mode as the mainstays of their networks. Only First Air has a dedicated freighter in one of its three B727s, and a combination B727 for backup for peak freight needs. However, its booth at last fall’s Air Cargo Forum in Calgary featured a B767 on the backboard. First Air’s marketing VP, Jim Ballingall, insisted that no orders had been placed yet, and that both the B757 and B767 were under consideration for the future fleet. As the north develops, I could see either aircraft meeting the market demand on trunk roots like Edmonton-Yellowknife or Montreal-Iqaluit; one larger aircraft in combi configuration could be economic if replacing two B727s.

What is on the horizon for new turboprop freighters? Continuing with the northern networks first, we are seeing conversions of aircraft that have been in service in the south as commuter aircraft. First Air has done a major program with the ATR 42 to make it a C-class cabin freighter that can operate in combi mode connecting northern communities to its jet service hubs. Air Inuit has updated Dash 8s to operate on gravel runways with fewer seats and a larger cargo area. Calm Air uses Saab 340s but these are strictly passenger. While HS748s remain important in all of these carriers’ fleets, these 40-year-old aircraft are being replaced with 20-year-old aircraft retired from southern commuter fleets.

Turning to southern cargo services, trucks may be the replacement for many communities’ connections to the integrator hubs. Some clients, however, such as banks, want even faster service so there will continue to be an assortment of smaller aircraft, from Morningstar’s Caravans (wearing Fedex colours) to a host of 703/704 operators providing connecting services with various Beech and Metro models.

As for the larger turboprops, the economics are much the same as for the jets that will see B727s continue to be operated for many years. Kelowna Flightcraft is now the OEM for the Convair models. It developed its own CV5800, a stretched, re-engined, glass-cockpit freighter that can haul much more than a standard 580. Yet it continues to operate the older models in its own operations for Purolator because the rates of utilization in the southern cargo market will not justify even the $4-million cost of the CV5800.

I earlier lamented the lack of the DHC-5 Buffalo in today’s civil fleets; military operators just won’t part with them. Arctic Sunwest was able to snag two civil Buffaloes and is reportedly cleaning up with them, but there are simply no more available. The venerable DC-3 updated as the Basler BT-67 has failed to find more than a couple of customers in Canada, and these use them mostly for their highly specialized Antarctica contracts. Eastern Europe makes some interesting freighters such as the Antonov 26 & 32 models but would never get certified for North American operations.

The only chance I can see for a ‘newer’ cargo aircraft in the 10,000- to 20,000-lb payload range would be if some operator can combine daily northern resupply operations to remote communities with night courier services for the utilization needed to cover the higher purchase cost.