· ICAO24 ae6239· last seen 3d ago

69-6645 is a Bell Helicopter 212. SkyMeter has tracked 242 flights totalling 481 hours of airtime via ADS-B across 29 callsigns. The most frequent segment is KE80 to KABQ. Service window in our records spans 400 days. The Bell Helicopter 212 has a maximum takeoff weight of 11,200 lb, light wake category.

About the Bell Helicopter 212

The Bell 212 is a twin-engine medium utility helicopter that brought unprecedented safety and capability to civilian operators when it entered service in 1970. Developed from the military UH-1N Twin Huey, the 212 was the first commercial helicopter to offer true twin-engine redundancy with its coupled Pratt & Whitney PT6T-3 Turbo Twin-Pac powerplant—a configuration that allows continued flight on a single engine, a critical advantage for offshore oil operations, mountain flying, and other demanding missions where engine failure over hostile terrain was previously a career-ending event.

Bell produced the 212 for nearly three decades, and it became the workhorse of the global offshore oil industry throughout the 1970s and 1980s. Its 15-seat cabin, 5,000-pound external sling capacity, and ability to operate from confined platforms made it ideal for ferrying crews to rigs in the North Sea, Gulf of Mexico, and remote Arctic sites. The type's rugged landing gear and proven rotor system—inherited from the legendary Huey lineage—gave it exceptional reliability in harsh environments. Maximum cruise speed is around 100 knots, with a service ceiling near 17,000 feet and range of approximately 260 nautical miles with standard fuel.

Though production ended in 1998 with the introduction of the Bell 412 (a four-bladed successor), hundreds of 212s remain in active service worldwide. Operators prize the type for utility work, firefighting with Bambi buckets, and charter operations in regions where parts support and pilot familiarity remain strong. The 212's straightforward systems and forgiving handling characteristics have made it a training staple for pilots transitioning to twin-engine helicopters.

SkyMeter has tracked flights across airframes and operators, with the largest observed operator.

FLIGHTS
242
all time
FLOWN HOURS
481
tracked time
📍
AIRPORTS VISITED
3
unique
📡
CALLSIGNS
29
4 routes
📅
SERVICE PERIOD
05/27/2025 → 07/01/2026
first → last
INCIDENT RATE
0.0%
0 flagged

Top routes

By flight count

1
1

Aircraft specifications

Bell Helicopter 212

Engines
Twin Rotorcraft
MTOW
11,200 lb
Wake category
L

Recent flights

Newest 50 operations of 69-6645

50
07/01/2026
47m
No alerts
07/01/2026
1h 0m
No alerts
07/01/2026
35m
No alerts
07/01/2026
2h 33m
No alerts
07/01/2026
12m
No alerts
07/01/2026
25m
No alerts
07/01/2026
45m
No alerts
06/30/2026
49m
No alerts
06/30/2026
1h 11m
No alerts
06/30/2026
2h 0m
No alerts
06/29/2026
2h 15m
No alerts
06/26/2026
49m
No alerts
06/26/2026
10m
No alerts
06/26/2026
27m
No alerts
06/25/2026
32m
No alerts
06/25/2026
24m
No alerts
06/25/2026
29m
No alerts
06/25/2026
1h 54m
No alerts
06/25/2026
17m
No alerts
06/24/2026
36m
No alerts
06/23/2026
13m
No alerts
06/17/2026
26m
No alerts
06/17/2026
1h 3m
No alerts
06/17/2026
2h 3m
No alerts
06/17/2026
29m
No alerts
06/16/2026
12m
No alerts
06/16/2026
2h 33m
No alerts
06/16/2026
38m
No alerts
06/16/2026
13m
No alerts
06/16/2026
2h 12m
No alerts
06/16/2026
28m
No alerts
06/07/2026
5m
No alerts
06/05/2026
6m
No alerts
05/28/2026
24m
No alerts
05/28/2026
7m
No alerts
05/28/2026
2h 20m
No alerts
05/28/2026
38m
No alerts
05/27/2026
24m
No alerts
05/27/2026
43m
No alerts
05/27/2026
5m
No alerts
05/27/2026
9m
No alerts
05/27/2026
35m
No alerts
05/27/2026
17m
No alerts
05/26/2026
40m
No alerts
05/26/2026
12m
No alerts
05/11/2026
2h 24m
No alerts
05/07/2026
19m
No alerts
05/07/2026
28m
No alerts
05/07/2026
20m
No alerts
05/07/2026
47m
No alerts
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