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DC-2
Conceptually similar
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DC-2 Fuselage Assembly
Douglas DC-2 (1934-1937): Even before TWA took delivery of the DC-1 prototype, it ordered 25 more Douglas transports under the designation DC-2. The new plane was similar to the DC-1 but had increased engine power and was more than two feet longer, which meant it could carry two more passengers. The DC-2 made its first flight on May 11, 1934. That same year KLM entered a DC-2 in the London-to-Melbourne Air Race. It made every scheduled passenger stop on the 9,000 mile route, carried mail, and even turned back once to pick up a stranded passenger. Yet the DC-2 finished in second place behind a racing plane built especially for that competition. (A modified Boeing Model 247 came in third.) The DC-2 became the first Douglas aircraft to win the famed Collier Trophy for outstanding achievements in flight. Douglas eventually produced 156 DC-2s at its Santa Monica, Ca. plant.
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Unique identifier
BI2118
Boeing ID
sm5685
Type
Image
Size
5998px × 4752px 27MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1930s
abundance
airplanes
commercial
commercial passenger planes
factories
full body views
fuselages
ground shots
historic production status
interiors
left rear views
manufacturing
monoplanes
nobody
perspective lines
photos
propeller planes
repetition
stairs, lifts and ladders
structural systems
tails
text
unpainted
viewed from above
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