Air Charter International


Air Charter was a French charter airline that operated from 1966 to 1998.

Foundation

Air Charter was a subsidiary of Air France and was established on 7 February 1966 under the name SAFA - Societé Aérienne Française d'Affrètements. Flight operations began on 25 July 1966 with two Sud Caravelle and two Lockheed Super Constellation aircraft. These flew charters from Paris to the Mediterranean.

Change to Air Charter International

The airline changed its name on 8 December 1969 to Air Charter International. In 1971 ACI operated a fleet of seven Caravelle and carried about 420.000 passengers. The first two Boeing 727-200 were introduced in 1972. Transatlantic charter flights to the USA and Canada were offered from 1982 onwards with leased Boeing 747-200 aircraft operated by Air France. Six SE-210 were leased from EAS until 1992.

Late history and closure

In 1984 the airline name was shortened to Air Charter. As the business grew, the first widebody aircraft was introduced in 1988, the Airbus A300B4.
Two Boeing 737-200 from EAS Europe Aéro Service on 1988
By the mid-1990s, the 727s were replaced by the Airbus A320. With the merger of Air France and Air Inter in 1998, Air Charter had served its purpose and services were discontinued on 24 October 1998.

Fleet details

Aircraft used in Air Charter colours:
Other aircraft used by Air Charter: