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Astraeus Airlines

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Astraeus
IATA ICAO Call sign
5W AEU FLYSTAR
Founded2002
Ceased operations21 November 2011
Operating basesGatwick Airport
Fleet size9
Parent companyFengur
HeadquartersCrawley, United Kingdom
Key peopleSteve Clarke, Palli Borg, Daryl Deacon, Bruce Dickinson, Phil Rushton
An Astraeus Boeing 737-700 takes off from Bristol Airport, England (2008)

Astraeus Limited, trading as Astraeus Airlines, was a British airline based at Astraeus House in Crawley, West Sussex, England.[1] Founded in 2002, and named after the Greek God of the dusk, it entered administration on 21 November 2011, ceasing operations the same day.

Established as a charter airline, Astraeus changed its business model in May 2008 and ceased full-time charter and scheduled service flying to concentrate on sublease activities. Astraeus provided aircraft anywhere in the world to meet short and long-term lease requirements, with wet lease, damp lease or dry lease options. The main base was London Gatwick Airport.[2]

Astraeus Airlines also had a history of providing ad hoc capacity to various clients. This included sports charters (Manchester United, Arsenal, UK and Irish FA and many others), military charters, show business charters (Disney, Warner Bros.), various government contracts and general charters for the leisure and business industry.

Astraeus Limited held a United Kingdom Civil Aviation Authority Type A Operating Licence and was therefore permitted to carry passengers, cargo and mail on aircraft with 20 or more seats. Astraeus Airlines was an IOSA registered company with the International Air Transport Association.

History

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Astraeus Airlines commenced charter operations in 2002 with Boeing 737 aircraft and also operated under the Flystar brand for a short time.[2] After establishing itself as a reliable charter carrier to UK leisure tour operators for both summer and winter seasons, the fleet was extended in 2004 to include Boeing 757 aircraft. By 2008 the fleet had grown to two Boeing 737-300s, two Boeing 737-700s and five Boeing 757-200s.

As of 2009, Astraeus Airlines was the only airline charter company which remained based at Gatwick Airport, and grew its fleet, adding a Boeing 737-500 and 737-700.

Astraeus was a 100%-owned subsidiary of Eignarhaldsfelagid Fengur hf, an Icelandic-based travel group that also owned the Iceland Express airline.

Astraeus ended operations on 21 November 2011 and entered administration. The airline cited a lack of contracts for the winter of 2011 and some "extremely bad luck" with technical issues as reasons for ending operations.[3]

Fleet

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In November 2011, the Astraeus fleet consisted of the following aircraft with an average age of 17.4 years:[2][4][5]

An Astraeus Boeing 757-200. (2007)
Astraeus Fleet
Aircraft In Services Passengers Notes
Airbus A320-200 1 180
Boeing 737-500 1 126
Boeing 737-700 2 148
Boeing 757-200 5 160-221
Total
9

Astraeus and Iron Maiden

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Astraeus 757-200 G-STRX as "Ed Force One" in May 2011.

The heavy metal band Iron Maiden lead singer Bruce Dickinson was a captain for Astraeus, flying the Boeing 757 aircraft when not performing with the band.[6] Dickinson was also Astraeus's Marketing Director. Dickinson has flown many high-profile flights for Astraeus: for example, on 20 October 2010, he flew the Liverpool F.C. team to Naples, Italy, for their European Cup match against Napoli.

Iron Maiden commissioned an Astraeus 757 as transport for their Somewhere Back in Time tour in 2008 and nicknamed it Ed Force One, flown by the lead singer Dickinson himself. The aircraft was converted into a combi configuration, repainted with an Iron Maiden livery and was used in this scheme until 28 May 2008. The same aircraft (G-OJIB) was used again on the second leg of the Somewhere Back in Time tour in 2009. The aircraft was also meant to be used for The Final Frontier World Tour in 2011; however on 8 February 2011 another 757-200 aircraft (G-STRX) departed Southend with a sightly differing Iron Maiden livery for the tour.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Contacts[usurped]." Astraeus Airlines. Retrieved on 22 May 2010.
  2. ^ a b c "UK & Ireland Airlines Guide 2011". Airliner World. March 2011. p. 3.
  3. ^ Astraeus Airlines in Administration - BBC
  4. ^ Civil Aviation Authority - aircraft register
  5. ^ Astraeus fleet list at planespotters.net
  6. ^ "Astraeus Airlines - Combi Tour". Archived from the original on 11 July 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
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