Colonel James Jabara Airport

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Colonel James Jabara Airport
IATA: noneICAO: KAAOFAA LID: AAO
Summary
Airport type Public
Owner Wichita Airport Authority
Location Wichita, Kansas
Elevation AMSL 1,421 ft / 433 m
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
18/36 6,101 1,860 Concrete
Helipads
Number Length Surface
ft m
H1 50 15 Concrete
Statistics (2006)
Aircraft operations 38,300
Based aircraft 108

Colonel James Jabara Airport (ICAO: KAAOFAA LID: AAO) is a public airport located nine miles (14 km) northeast of the central business district of Wichita, a city in Sedgwick County, Kansas, United States.[1] It is named in honor of World War II and Korean War flying ace James Jabara, an American of Lebanese descent who has the distinction of being the first American jet ace.

Although most U.S. airports use the same three-letter location identifier for the FAA and IATA, Colonel James Jabara Airport is assigned AAO by the FAA but has no designation from the IATA (which assigned AAO to Anaco, Venezuela). The airport's ICAO identifier is KAAO. [2] [3]

Facilities and aircraft

Colonel James Jabara Airport covers an area of 600 acres (243 ha) which contains one runway and one helipad:[1]

  • Runway 18/36: 6,101 x 100 ft (1,860 x 30 m), Surface: Concrete
  • Helipad H1: 50 x 50 ft (15 x 15 m), Surface: Concrete

For 12-month period ending May 31, 2006, the airport had 38,300 aircraft operations, an average of 104 per day: 97% general aviation and 3% air taxi. There are 108 aircraft based at this airport: 60% single engine, 28% multi-engine, 9% jet aircraft, 1% helicopters, 1% ultralights and 1% military.[1]

Incidents

On November 20th, 2013 at approximately 9:30 pm CST, a Boeing 747-400 Dreamlifter with registration N780BA and operated by Atlas Air, mistakenly landed at the Colonel James Jabara Airport. The large cargo plane was supposed to land at McConnell Air Force Base, taxi over to nearby Spirit AeroSystems to pick up some fuselage parts for the assembly of Boeing 787 Dreamliners in Seattle, Washington.[4][5][6] The plane successfully took off at 1:15 pm CST on November 21 and landed at nearby McConnell AFB.[7] The NTSB opened an investigation about the wrong landing.[8]

Nearby airports

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 FAA Airport Master Record for AAO (Form 5010 PDF), retrieved 2007-03-15
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External links