aviation - the past, present and future of flight

(WallPaper) #1
improving picture led to two additional DC-8-
43s being ordered.
The Bristol Britannia was retired in 1966
and the DC-8 operated all but the Western
Canada feeder routes flown by DC-3s and
DC-6s, making it an all Douglas airline.
Tragedy struck on March 4, 1966 when
Canadian Pacific’s DC-8-43, CF-CPK,
Empress of Edmonton crashed while
operating flight CP402 at Tokyo’s Haneda
airport. It touched down 2,800ft (854m)
short of the threshold in poor weather, killing
64 of the 72 people on board.

DC-8-50 SERIES
The Series 50 was the last of
the so-called ‘Baby 8s’. It
used the new Pratt and

Whitney JT-3D fan jets and had a new low
drag wing allowing 1,000nm (1,852km)
greater range. Canadian Pacific bought
two, DC-8-53 CF-CPM Empress of Lisbon
arrived on May 31, 1966 in the same
configuration as the DC-8-43s. A DC-8-
55CF (Combination Passenger/Freighter)
CF-CPT, Empress of Santiago was delivered
on November 17, 1967. It was briefly combi-
configured with 69 seats in economy, but
usually operated in full passenger layout. It
was the only cargo-door equipped DC-8 with
Canadian Pacific and was the first second-
hand DC-8 used by the carrier.
The Douglas DC-8 prototype ‘Ship #1’
(c/n 45252/ 1) N8008D, was leased by
Canadian Pacific from Trans International
Airlines for a year from October 1966 as

CF-CPN Empress of Santiago. It filled a
gap between deliveries of the two DC-8-
50s, and the loss of CF-CPK. The type
was in high demand and it took six months
to find an example to lease. The carrier’s
vice president of technical services (later
president), Ian Gray commented: “I think we
leased the last DC-8 in captivity.” Configured
as a DC-8-51, it accumulated approximately
4,200 hours during its year with the
Canadian airline.
The new DC-8-50s were used for its first
service to the United States, Vancouver-
San Francisco, in 1967. The carrier heavily
promoted Canada’s Centennial in 1967, which
as part of the celebrations included ‘Expo
67’ – the World Exposition held in Montreal.
The same year it increased the number of

22 Aviation News incorporating Jets August 2018

CP Air’s first DC-8-63 C-FCPO Empress of Tokyo at Toronto’s Terminal 1 with DC-8-53, C-FCPM, parked at the gate behind in July 1979. John Griffith

20-25_cp_airDC.mfDC.mfDC.mfDC.mf.indd 22 05/07/2018 15:02

Free download pdf