SAS Commuter

{{Short description|Former Swedish regional airline}}

{{Infobox airline

| airline=SAS Commuter

| logo = SAS_Commuter_Logo.svg

| IATA=SK

| ICAO=SAS

| callsign=SCANDINAVIAN

| parent=SAS Group

| founded=1988

| ceased=1 October 2004

| headquarters=Kastrup, Tårnby Municipality, Denmark

| key_people=Kristian Kircheiner (Managing Director)

| bases=

| frequent_flyer=EuroBonus

| alliance=Star Alliance

| fleet_size=33 (2004)

| destinations=

| website=

}}

SAS Commuter, also branded as Scandinavian Commuter, was a regional airline which operated in Denmark, Norway and Sweden. A sister company of Scandinavian Airlines (SAS), it operated various regional services on behalf of the Scandinavian flag carrier. The airline was headquartered at Copenhagen Airport, which also served as its main base. It later also operated bases at Tromsø Airport; Stockholm Arlanda Airport; Trondheim Airport, Værnes and Bergen Airport, Flesland.

Established in 1984 as Commuter Operations Department, a business unit of SAS, it initially flew minor services out of Copenhagen using a fleet of nine Fokker F27 Friendships. Twenty-two Fokker 50s were delivered in 1989 and 1990. They operated out of Copenhagen under the Eurolink brand, as well as taking over regional services in Northern Norway from May 1990 under the Norlink brand. Starting in February 1997, SAS Commuter took delivery of six Saab 2000, with it operated with the Swelink brand. They served domestic and secondary Finnish destinations out of Stockholm.

SAS Commuter became the launch customer of the Bombardier Dash 8-Q400 in January 2000, which over the next two years replaced the Eurolink Fokkers and the Saabs. The Q400 were initially plagued with technical faults. The Norlink operations were in 2002 abandoned to sister company Widerøe. However, from April 2003 SAS Commuter took over former Braathens routes in Western Norway, operated under the Westlink brand. SAS Commuter was dissolved on 1 October 2004 and integrated into the three national operating companies.

History

=Commuter Operations Department=

Following the retirement of the Convair Metropolitan in 1976, SAS operated an all-jetliner fleet.Hall: 15 Although it is the designated flag carrier for the three Scandinavian countries, each country has allowed domestic airlines to operate a significant portion of the domestic services. By the 1980s the smallest aircraft in SAS' fleet is the Douglas DC-9, which is too large for some services.{{cite journal |url=http://www.flightglobal.com/pdfarchive/view/1986/1986%20-%201528.html |title=How to be busy in a small hive |last=Learmount |first=David |journal=Flight International |date=5 July 1986 |pages=34–39 |access-date=22 August 2015}} Discussions were carried out in 1983 to create a dedicated domestic airline for Sweden, which would see a merger between among others SAS' domestic operations, Linjeflyg and Swedair. No agreement could be reached.Hall: 16

File:SAS Eurolink F-27-600.jpg at Hamburg Airport in 1989]]

SAS therefore decided to subcontract the operation of some of its international and domestic services to Busy Bee and Swedair, starting in 1982. Most of these were international services out of Copenhagen, as well as domestic routes in Sweden.{{cite news |title=Styrmenn får kapteins status: SAS-piloter presser seg inn i Swedair |last=Løvstuhagen |first=Knut |work=Aftenposten |date=18 August 1983 |page=33 |language=no}} The move was met with fierce opposition from the pilots unions, who threatened to "boycott" the decision by continuing to land aircraft on the former routes. For instance, services from Copenhagen to Kristiansand Airport, Kjevik and Bergen Airport, Flesland had previously been operated as a two-legged flight. With smaller aircraft, both could be operated as nonstop services.{{cite news |title=Full krig i SAS |last=Johansen |first=Arnstein |work=Verdens Gang |date=11 February 1984 |page=18 |language=no}}

After pressure from the pilots' union, SAS decided on 7 March 1984 to establish the Commuter Operations Department (COD) as a business unit. It would operate a series of regional airliners and have its own crew. The aircraft would otherwise be branded in line with SAS livery and branding. SAS terminated its agreements with Busy Bee and Swedair prematurely in order to insource the operations.{{cite news |title=Strid om Skandinaviaflyvninger: SAS bryter med Busy Bee |last=Guhnfeldt |first=Cato |author-link=Cato Guhnfeldt |work=Aftenposten |date=17 March 1984 |page=8 |language=no}}

File:SAS F-27 SE-ITH.jpg at Stockholm Arlanda Airport in 1987]]

Nine Fokker F27s were bought, four from Trans Australia Airlines for $9.5 million. Services commenced on 17 December 1984 with the first four aircraft under the subbrand Eurolink—operating shorter hauls out of Copenhagen Airport.Hall: 173 Initially this included routes to Oslo Airport, Fornebu; Göteborg Landvetter Airport; Haugesund Airport, Karmøy; Kristiansand Airport, Kjevik; Jönköping Airport and Hamburg Airport. The services to Hamburg was by far the busiest, with five to seven daily services.{{cite news |title=Forsinket åpning mandag: Harde forhandlinger om "miniSAS"-avtaler |last=Hansen |first=Lars Ditlev |work=Aftenposten |date=12 December 1984 |page=34 |language=no}} The old aircraft, built between 1967 and 1969, were unpopular with the customers because of low comfort, high noise levels and many technical problems. Customers would often complain when they realized they would have to travel with a F27 rather than a DC-9. A further five F27 were bought from Aero Trasporti Italiani in 1985, costing 70 million Swedish kronor (SEK).

=Fokker 50=

SAS announced in October 1986 that they intended to replace their commuter fleet with a newer aircraft type. The SAS Group's three owner companies—Aerotransport, Danish Air Lines and Norwegian Air Lines—decided in May 1988 to split the SAS Group into three consortia. Essentially the charter operator Scanair and SAS Commuter were split out into separate companies which became sisters of the SAS Group, owned in the tradition 3:2:2 ratio.{{cite news |title=SAS blir delt i tre selskaper |last=Hansen |first=Lars Otter |work=Aftenposten |date=27 May 1988 |page=50 |language=no}} This took effect in 1989.Hall: 177

File:Fokker 50, SE-LFP, Scandinavian Commuter Eurolink.jpg in 1994]]

The airline settled on ordering twenty-two Fokker 50s. By then the airline had decided to introduce two succinct brands, a continuation of the Eurolink operations out of Copenhagen and a Norlink brand to be used in Northern Norway. The aircraft received slightly different configurations, with the Eurolink aircraft having 46 seats to accommodate EuroClass, SAS' business class. The Norlink aircraft were all-economy and had seating for 50 passengers. Delivery of the first twenty aircraft took place between September 1989 and November 1990, with the last two being handed over in May 1991.Hall: 176–177 By 1991 SAS Commuter was making a profit of SEK 58 million in 1991.{{cite news |title=SAS Commuter |last=Solvang |first=Ola |date=9 April 1992 |page=5 |work=Nordlys |language=no}}

=Q400=

File:LN-RDD Scandinavian Commuter (SAS) (2192414439).jpg]]

The order for 15 Bombardier Dash 8-Q400 and a further option for 18 more was signed on 26 August 1997. SAS Commuter later executed 13 of the options.Hall: 216 The Q400s were planned to and would ultimately replace the entire Saab 2000 fleet of Swelink and the Fokker 50 fleet of Eurolink. However, Norlink retained use of Fokker 50 aircraft. The first Q400 was delivered on 18 January 2000 and entered traffic on 7 February.

As the launch customer of extended Q400, SAS was prone to many of the early faults with the aircraft type.{{cite news |title= SAS flyr videre med falsk alarm |last=Guhnfeldt |first=Cato |author-link=Cato Guhnfeldt |work=Aftenposten |date=19 October 2000 |page=22 |language=no}} Aviation historian Åke Hall stated that it was the aircraft type which SAS has had the most challenges with throughout its history. First of all the production was delayed and by May only four of eleven planned deliveries had been made. One issue was false alarms created by the cockpit software, while oil leaks caused for engines to have to be replaced.{{cite news |title=Nye SAS-fly rammet av feil |last=Guhnfeldt |first=Cato |author-link=Cato Guhnfeldt |work=Aftenposten |date=31 May 2000 |page=2 |language=no}} By October there had been nine emergency landings caused by various technical faults, and SAS Commuter chose to ground the aircraft for several days. Deliveries came to a halt that month as the eleven first aircraft were all having faults caused by the same defects. Delivery of further aircraft resumed in February 2001. As the various issues were resolved, the aircraft entered a more normal mode of operation. The 28th aircraft was delivered in 2002.

=Disestablishment=

In its last full year of operation, 2003, SAS Commuter had a revenue of SEK 2.5 billion, making a loss of between 100 and 200 million. The SAS Group decided in May 2004 to terminate SAS Commuter as a separate company. The reason was that the airline was restructuring itself. In Norway, SAS' operations would merge with Braathens to create SAS Braathens, which would also envelop the Westlink services and inherit the Fokker 50s. Similar national operating companies were established for Denmark and Sweden. SAS stated that the utility of having SAS Commuter was lower operating costs than Scandinavian Airlines, but that restructuring had caused these discrepancies to dissipate. The last flight took place on 1 October 2004.{{cite news |title=SAS sparer 50 millioner |last=Larsen |first=Trygve |work=Dagens Næringsliv |date=25 May 2004 |page=4 |language=no}}

Fleet

At the time the airline was merged into the national airlines, it had the following fleet

class="wikitable plainrowheaders sortable" style="margin:1em auto; text-align: center;"

|+ SAS Commuter aircraft

! scope=col | Aircraft

! scope=col class=unsortable | Image

! scope=col | Quantity

! scope=col | Pax

! scope=col | Start

! scope=col | End

! scope=col class=unsortable | Ref(s).

scope=row | Fokker F27 Friendship

| File:SAS F-27 SE-ITH.jpg || 9 || {{sort|040|40}} || 1984 || 1990 || Hall: 172–173

scope=row | Fokker 50

| File:Scandinavian Commuter F50 LN-RNE.jpg || 22 || {{sort|050|46–50}}|| 1990|| 2004 || {{cite news |url=http://www.dagbladet.no/2010/02/15/tema/reise/sas/wideroe/vestlink/10409072/ |title=Over og ut for SAS' problemfly -Widerøe overtar Vestlandet |work=Dagbladet |last=Pedersen |first=Eivind |date=15 February 2010 |access-date=13 September 2012 |archive-date=9 October 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121009122904/http://www.dagbladet.no/2010/02/15/tema/reise/sas/wideroe/vestlink/10409072/ |url-status=live |language=no}}

scope=row | Saab 2000

| File:SAS Commuter Saab 2000 LN-LSA.jpg || 7 ||{{sort|049|49}} || 1997 || 2001 || Hall: 200–201

scope=row | Bombardier Dash-8-Q400

| File:Scandinavian Commuter Q400 OY-KCD.jpg || 28 || {{sort|76|72–76}} || 2000 || 2004 || Hall: 215–216{{cite news |url=https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/bombardier-settles-claim-with-sas-over-q400-turboprops-1.730784 |title=Bombardier settles claim with SAS over Q400 turboprops |publisher=CBC News |access-date=13 September 2012 |archive-date=13 November 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121113144002/http://www.cbc.ca/news/business/story/2008/03/10/bombardiersas.html |url-status=live}}

References

{{Reflist|30em}}

Bibliography

{{Commons category|Scandinavian Commuter}}

  • {{cite book |last=Hall |first=Åke |title=Luftens Vikingar – en bok om SAS alla flygplan |year=2002 |publisher=Air Historic Research |location=Nässjö |isbn=91-973892-3-4 |language=sv}}
  • {{cite book |last=Trumpy |first=Jacob |title=Høyt spill |year=2012 |location=Oslo |publisher=Kagge Forlag |language=no |isbn=978-82-489-1190-6}}

{{Portal bar|Aviation|Companies|Denmark|Norway|Sweden}}

{{SAS Group}}

{{Airlines of Denmark}}

{{Airlines of Norway}}

{{Airlines of Sweden}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Sas Commuter}}

Category:Scandinavian Airlines

Category:Defunct airlines of Denmark

Category:Defunct airlines of Sweden

Category:Defunct airlines of Norway

Category:1988 establishments in Norway

Category:2004 disestablishments in Norway

Category:Airlines established in 1988

Category:Airlines disestablished in 2004