Transocean Air
Lines Douglas DC-4
N30045
(c/n 10434)
Transocean Air Lines was
founded in Oakland California in 1946 and was the most innovative
and opportunist, if not the
largest, of all the non-scheduled airlines. Headed by the
inspirational
Orvis Nelson, its business
empire extended far beyond providing transportation within the United
States. The
above ex C-54B-1-DC, for instance, was leased to Iranian Airways as
EP-ADZ
along
with operational expertise (and probably flight deck crew) from
Transocean. The company
also provided
technical expertise to Philippine Air Lines, Japan Air Lines, Air
Jordan and Saudia.
Most Transocean aircraft had the diminutive 'TALOA' which stood for
'Transocean Air Lines Oak-
land' on the
tail. The airline owned, operated or leased the
largest fleet of DC-4s of any line, some
75 of them having been registered under their name at one time or
another between 1946 and 1960.
Many came from United Air Lines and this is evident in the overall look
of their livery. Colors were
different,
though, as seen in image of the nose of the DC-4 below. This one,
N4665V was operated
on the pseudo-scheduled
'Royal Hawaiian' flights from Oakland to Honolulu.
Transocean's equip-
ment and facilities
were used in the making of a number of movies, most notable of these
being
"The High and the
Mighty". Having been refused time and again to obtain
scheduled certification
by a seemingly indifferent, if not outright
antagonistic bureaucracy in the form of the CAB, and
thwarted in its attempt to
enter the jet age with Boeing 707s, (by a major airline who shall
remain
nameless, but promised
to pull its orders from Boeing should they sell to Taloa) the company,
in
1960 found itself in need
operating capital. It would appear that the
California banks were
unwilling to go on a limb to
extend financing to the company (even though Japan Air Lines, who
by that time were more than
solvent in their own right and willing to back Transocean), and thus
the airline which had
been so instrumental in shaping the future of so many companies was
forced
into filing for bankruptcy. Incidentally, these same cautious
banks were, four decades later, as we
know, to throw common sense
out the window and offer housing loans which could not possibly
be
paid. Transocean's ROI on the other hand would
have been substantial. In the event Trans-
ocean's operation was
taken over by United States Overseas Airlines.
Douglas DC-4
N4665V
(c/n 10538)