Friday, 15 May 2026

Short S45 Solent 4 ZK-AMO at MOTAT

As I was in the Western Springs area yesterday and armed with my Gold Card, I called into the Aviation Hall at MOTAT to re-familiarise myself with the museum.  It was much the same as I remembered it but I thought it was pretty dark inside, and the aircraft were mostly still hard to photograph.  And a lot of the smaller aircraft were hanging from the roof in the rear part of the big hall.  However the TEAL Solent flying boat is in a position to get reasonable photos of from the mezzanine floor so I took a couple. and I will post them here as we have not covered ZK-AMO on the blog before: 

ZK-AMO (c/n SH.1559) was delivered to Tasman Empire Airways Ltd (TEAL) in November 1949 and along with the rest of TEAL's Solent fleet (ZK-AML, AMM, AMN and AMQ)  flew trans-Tasman services between Auckland and Sydney and between Wellington and Sydney, and also operated the "Coral Route" from Auckland to Tahiti.  Wikipedia details the Coral Route as follows:  

"It became the only air route into Tahiti, with Americans and others from Northern Hemisphere flying by landplanes into Nadi in Fiji, making the short trip across to Suva to join the flying boat at Laucala Bay, for its fortnightly flight along the Coral Route, leaving on a Thursday morning for Samoa, alighting on the Satapuala lagoon about 2:00 pm. Passengers were driven by cab through Samoan coastal villages to Apia, where they enjoyed respite and dinner at Aggie Grey's hotel until 2:00 am when they were driven back out to Satapuala for a pre-dawn take-off to the Akaiami lagoon at Aitutaki where they went ashore for breakfast and an optional swim until mid-morning takeoff for Papeete, timed to ensure that arrival was after the end of the siesta period at 2:00 pm. After launching ashore and completing Customs, passengers had to wait a further hour while their luggage was sprayed against horticultural pests, a time usually spent by the majority across the road from the Customshouse at Quinn's Bar. In all, a 30-hour leisurely introduction to life in the South Seas which made the Coral Route a legendary travel experience."

ZK-AMO flew its last service on 14 September 1960 and on 8 December 1960 it was donated to the Museum of Transport and Technology (MOTAT) whose volunteers have done a great job of preserving and restoring it to its current condition inside the Aviation Hall on Meola Rd in Auckland.

You can see a lot of the smaller aircraft in the MOTAT collection hanging from the roof (where you can't really see them very well).  And to the right of the photos is the equally impressive Short Sunderland NZ4115.

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