Philippine Airlines

Philippine Airlines is the flag carrier and largest airline of the Philippines, operating scheduled domestic and international services.

= History = Philippine Airlines was established in 1941.

Incidents

 * 11 December 1957 DHBC-2 Heron 3B RP-C55 (c/n C325/1954), operating a scheduled flight from Ozamiz City to Pagadian, crashed during take-off due to a loss of control. Passing 75 feet after take-off, the aircraft suddenly banked left and lost altitude, catching fire after hitting some trees. Climbing through 75 feet after takeoff, the Otter suddenly turned left and descended. The airplane hit two trees and caught fire. It was determined that the weight of the passengers' hand luggage was not included in the weight calculations. Even with that weight included, the gross weight was still within the aircraft's MTOW; however, the passengers were mostly seated at the rear, the weight was distributed unevenly. This, as well as gusty winds and a high ambient temperature together with a too-steep climb on take-off contributed to the irrecoverable low-altitude stall. Of the ten passengers and two pilots, the pilot and one passenger were killed.


 * 27 July 1962 Heron 3B RP-C56 (c/n C372/1955) crashed during a training flight; both pilots were killed.


 * 20 May 1964 Philippine Airlines Heron 3B RP-C52 (c/n C313/1953), operating as Flight PAL26 from Siocon to Zamboanga, crashed in heavy weather near Sibuco Point. Despite near-zero visibility due to the heavy rain, the pilot continued to fly VFR into a heavy squall, and the aircraft went down over the rocky shoreline. All eleven passengers and two crew were killed.

Philippine Airlines in British Columbia
Philippine Airlines began services between Vancouver and Manila in 1983.

= Fleet =

Current

 * Airbus A320-200 - 7
 * Airbus A321-200 - 18
 * Airbus A321neo - 8, +13 on order
 * Airbus A330-300 - 9
 * Airbus A350-900 - 2
 * Boeing 777-300ER - 9

Historic

 * Airbus A300B4 - 13 (1979-2001)
 * Airbus A319-100 - 4 (2006-2014)
 * Airbus A340-200 - 4 (1996-1999)
 * Airbus A340-300 - 8 (1996-2018)
 * Armstrong Whitworth Argosy C Mk 1 - 1 (1976-1981)
 * BAC 111-400 - 4 (1966-1971)
 * BAC 111-500 - 13 (1971-1992)
 * Beech 18 - 2 (1941-1946)
 * Boeing 727-100 - 2 (1981-1984)
 * Boeing 727-200 - 2 (1979-1981)
 * Boeing 737-300 - 15 (1989-2008)
 * Boeing 737-400 - 3 (2000-2007)
 * Boeing 747-200B - 9 (1979-2000)
 * Boeing 747-200M - 4 (1988-1997)
 * Boeing 747-400 - 4 (1993-2014)
 * Boeing 747-400M - 1 (1996-2014)
 * DHBC-2 Heron 3B - 7 (1953-1989)
 * DHC-3 Otter - 6 (1955-1972)
 * Convair CV-340 - 1 (1954-1959)
 * Douglas DC-3A - 2 (1965-1981)
 * Douglas DC-3C - 1 (1959-1970)
 * Douglas C-47A - 18 (1945-1969)
 * Douglas C-47B - 4 (1946-1973)
 * Douglas VC-47D - 1 (1948-1966)
 * Douglas DC-4A - 5 (1946-1957), 3 (1964-1968)
 * Douglas DC-6 - 5 (1948-1955)
 * Douglas DC-6B - 2 (1952-1954)
 * Douglas DC-8-33 - 2 (1969-1978)
 * Douglas DC-8-51 - 5 (1978-1986)
 * Douglas DC-8-53 - 3 (1962-1983)
 * Douglas DC-8-55 - 1 (1977-1984)
 * Douglas DC-8-63 - 2 (1973-1975)
 * Fokker F27 - 18 (1960-1967)
 * Fokker 50 - 11 (1988-1999)
 * Hawker Siddeley HS.748 - 21 (1967-1989)
 * McDonnell Douglas DC-10-30 - 6 (1974-1996)
 * McDonnell Douglas MD-11ER - 2 (1996-1998)
 * NAMC YS-11 - 12 (1972-1985)
 * Short 360-300 - 8 (1987-1999)
 * Vickers Viscount - 4 (1957-1967)

BC-made aircraft
''Note: a green background indicates an aircraft in service, a yellow background indicates a retired aircraft, and a pink background indicates an aircraft lost in an accident.

= Routes = Entries with a green background indicates a destination in British Columbia.