BAC 1-11 510ED  G-AVMT

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Serial Number 147  -   First Flight 10th January 1969  -  Delivery 28th March 1969

This aircraft was built by the British Aircraft Corporation at Hurn Airport and has accumulated some 50,000 flying hours and carried out more than 50,000 take off and landings.

"Golf Alpha Victor Mike Tango" was one of 18 BAC 1-11s that were ordered by British European Airways on 27 Jan 1967. 97 seats were installed in a single class configuration. The aircraft was put into service from Berlin-Tempelhof on the company’s internal German network as well as on the Heathrow to Manchester route. A 1-11 division was set up in Manchester in 1971. This became the 1-11s main operating base in the 1970s.

All these aircraft were unusual in so much as they were fitted with a non-standard Smiths Industries SF5 flight director and compass system. In fact the instrument layout was designed around the HS Trident fleet to enable some commonality between the two fleets. Another strange decision of BEA was to exclude the provision of forward airstairs on the aircraft. This caused one or two problems during later service until they were eventually added in the mid 1990s. It was a very busy period for the newly delivered 1-11s. They flew as many as twelve sectors a day with scheduled 20 minute turnarounds but managed to achieve this with a superb reliability record for a new type.

The aircraft served for BEA until the company was merged with BOAC to form British Airways on the 1st April 1974. Three different liveries were worn by BEA's 1-11s. The first being the short lived "red square" colour scheme which only appeared on the first few aircraft. The first change came about when Air France pulled off the Berlin route. Joint BEA / Air France services commenced with the "Super one-eleven" fleet. To avoid a loss of face by Air France’s withdrawal from the market BEA agreed to paint a neutral colour scheme on their 1-11 fleet. This arrangement commenced from the summer 1969 flying program. The new scheme incorporated a smaller BEA logo at the forward end of the fuselage and a blue tail with the "super one-eleven" legend. "MT" was delivered in the second livery. The final scheme incorporated the "quarter jack" logo which was worn until the airline became part of British Airways.

G-AVMT continued in service with British Airways on short haul routes and as a shuttle back up aircraft until retirement on the 30 September 1992. It was flown to Hurn and placed into storage on the 1st October 1992. It wore three further liveries with British Airways, firstly with the familiar "British Airways" logo, then with the "British" only logo and finally with the new British Airways scheme that was adopted during the mid 1980s. The very last British Airways 1-11 series 510ED service took place on the 31st December 1992 with G-AVMS. In nearly 25 years of service, not a single major accident had occurred on the 1-11 fleet! During 1993 British Airways had started to dispose of their stored 1-11 fleet, although prospects were not looking very good. Two aircraft went to new homes at Duxford and Cosford museums. As for the other 16 aircraft it looked like the scrapmans axe until a company called European Aviation bought the remaining fleet.

This company had been formed in 1989 by Paul Stoddart. He now owns a sizeable fleet, which includes BAC 1-11s, Boeing 737s and more recently Boeing 747s. The first two 1-11s to enter service were G-AVMT and G-AVMW which were leased to Air Bristol in October 1993 and based at Bristol Filton transferring BAe employees between Filton and the Airbus factory in Toulouse. In fact Filton was selected as the main operating base for European Aviation. The entire fleet was therefore flown from Hurn to Filton. It was not long though before European Aviation decided that Filton was not ideal for their operations so the 1-11s moved back to Hurn and their original production site where they have remained until this day. In the meantime G-AVMT had been sprayed into a new livery with a huge "SHANNON" title running along the full length of the fuselage. This new livery was given to the aircraft as Air Bristol had expanded their operations and commenced a new route from London Stansted to Shannon. The airline also took the opportunity of remarketing itself as "AB Airlines" and hence the name "AB Shannon" for this particular aircraft.

It was in this livery that G-AVMT had its proudest moment as it participated in Heathrow Airport’s 50th anniversary flypast and was viewed by many thousands of people on the ground and by millions more as the event was televised around the country.

After a couple of years in service with AB Airlines the aircraft was returned to European and leased out to new Hurn based operator Euroscot Express. It flew from Hurn to Edinburgh and Glasgow for a couple of seasons until Euroscot replaced it with an ATR72. It returned to European and appeared in the more familiar "EAL" colour scheme for the first time. Towards the end of 1999 it was once again leased to another new operator "fly European". This was another short-lived company and by the summer of 2000 it was back in service with European spending much of its time based at Gatwick.

The biggest change in its use came in 2001 when it appeared in its current livery.

Paul Stoddart had recently bought the Minardi F1 racing team. Therefore he decided that it would be appropriate to have a company aircraft to take the racing team around Europe to the various Grand Prix races. It appeared from the spray shop resplendent in its new European Minardi F1 livery in April 2001. It looked very smart indeed. It was used throughout the 2001 grand prix season in a corporate layout which basically involved removing many of the seats from the cabin. It was also available for other ad hoc executive charters. It carried out its last flight on the 13th February 2002 and was placed into storage at Hurn.  European Aviation tried to sell it for over a year without success.  It was decommissioned in 2004 and broken up in November.  The fuselage survives as a cabin trainer at Cardiff Airport. 

So that is just about the end of the G-AVMT story. 33 years, 50,000 hours, 50,000 landings, 11 different colour schemes! What a history!

412 BEA 1-11 G-AVMI Red Sq ATPH.jpg (177558 bytes)  The original BEA "red square" livery worn by the first BEA 1-11s delivered from Hurn
413 BEA 1-11 G-AVMT Quarter Jack number 3a.JPG (55083 bytes)  The "blue tail Super one-eleven" livery worn for Tempelhof services 1969
414 BEA 1-11 G-AVMT Berlin Tempelhof early 70s.jpg (177914 bytes)  The "quarter Jack" BEA livery worn in the early 1970s
414 British Airways 1-11 G-AVMT Heathrow 23 Sep 1978.JPG (82553 bytes)  The original British Airways livery worn from the mid 1970s to early 80s
415 British Airways 1-11 G-AVMT British EGCC Dec 1981.JPG (54135 bytes)  The "British" titles. worn during the early 1980s
416 British Airways 1-11 G-AVMT number 4a.JPG (127633 bytes)  The "new" British Airways livery worn from the mid 1980s to retirement
417 Air Bristol 1-11 G-AVMT Hurn 3a.JPG (78910 bytes)  The first livery worn by Air Bristol 1993 to 95 on lease from European
418 AB Shannon 1-11 G-AVMT Shannon 22 Apr 1997.jpg (130880 bytes)  Renamed AB Airlines during 1996  the "Shannon" titles were applied
419 Euroscot 1-11 G-AVMT Hurn May 1998.JPG (144999 bytes)  The livery worn by Bournemouth based Euroscot Express during 1997
420 European 1-11 G-AVMT Rotterdam 22 May 1999.JPG (95938 bytes)  "MT" finally got to wear the familiar "EAL" livery from 1998 to 99
Fly European 1-11 G-AVMT Hurn 7 May 2000 Mike Stewart.jpg (184572 bytes)  The short lived Fly european livery worn during 2000
422 European Minardi 1-11 G-AVMT Hurn 4 Jul 2001.JPG (475734 bytes)  The final livery. The European Minardi scheme applied during 2001

 

For more images of G-AVMT follow this link:- G-AVMT at airliners.net

 

THE LAST FLIGHTS OF G-AZMF

During March 2002 G-AZMF carried out its last passenger flights as a UK registered Airliner. Below is a selection of photographic images capturing the aircraft during its last days of service with European Aviation.

1-11 1.jpg (140902 bytes)  On tow from the European Hangars Saturday 16th March
1-11 2.jpg (121592 bytes)  Final approach for runway 26 at Hurn Saturday 16th March
1-11 3.JPG (150095 bytes)  Touchdown on runway 26 at Hurn Saturday 16th March
1-11 4.jpg (167667 bytes)  Departing for another enthusiast flight at Hurn Saturday 16th March
1-11 7.jpg (66072 bytes)  Arrival from Turin on the Eastern Apron at Hurn Sunday 17th March
1-11 5.jpg (171283 bytes)  The final visit of a European 1-11 to Manchester Saturday 30th March
1-11 6.jpg (130545 bytes)  And final take off from Manchester Saturday 30th March
European 1-11 G-AZMF Luton 30 Mar 2002 Martin Pole 2.jpg (225101 bytes)  Final take off from Luton Saturday 30th March "Going"!
European 1-11 G-AZMF Luton 30 Mar 2002 Martin Pole 3 .jpg (290816 bytes)  Final take off from Luton Saturday 30th March "Going"!!
European 1-11 G-AZMF Luton 30 Mar 2002 Martin Pole 4.jpg (180224 bytes)  Final take off from Luton Saturday 30th March "Gone"!!!
European 1-11 G-AZMF Hurn 31 Mar 2002 Simon Adams.jpg (120396 bytes)  The final day! Landing on runway 26 at Hurn 31st March

 

For more images of G-AZMF follow this link:- G-AZMF at airliners.net

 

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