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Conceptually similar
767-400ER Assembly
767-400ER Assembly
767-300 Assembly
767-400 Assembly
767 Assembly Line
767-400ER Assembly
767-200 Assembly
767 Final Assembly
767 Assembly Final Body Join
767-400ER Manufacturing
767-400ER Tail Cone Assembly
767 Assembly Line
767-400ER Assembly
767 in Assembly at Boeing's Everett Facility
767 Factory Final Assembly
767-400ER Airframe Assembly
Preparing 767 Freighter to Leave Assembly Line
767 Fuselages Lined Up for Assembly
First 767-300F in Assembly
767 Factory Final Assembly
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767 Conventional Assembly, circa 2000
767s were manufactured was in a conventional slant position (shown here) until 2002, when the 767 program officially transitioned to orienting the airplane in a straight line configuration when it faced two 767s toward the big factory doors in Everett, WA. At that time, the Boeing 767 joined the 717, 737, 747 and 757 programs, which also use this innovative manufacturing technique -- called a moving line -- to improve production efficiency and quality, while shortening the time it takes to deliver airplanes to airline customers.
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Unique identifier
BI219592
Boeing ID
k61556
Type
Image
Size
4800px × 3192px 43MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1980s
abundance
aerial views
airplanes
commercial
commercial passenger planes
currently in production
factories
fuselages
glare
ground shots
half-length views
interiors
jets
manufacturing
monoplanes
nobody
nose sections
perspective lines
photos
reflections
repetition
silver color
structural systems
unpainted
viewed from above
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