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DC-5 
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Pre-flight for  the DC-5
Pre-flight for the DC-5 
Loading the DC-5
Loading the DC-5 
DC-5 with Ground Crew
DC-5 with Ground Crew 
Preparing to Ship the DC-5
Preparing to Ship the DC-5 
DC-5 Boarding Passenger
DC-5 Boarding Passenger 
Admiring the DC-5
Admiring the DC-5 
Douglas DC-5 on Tarmac
Douglas DC-5 on Tarmac 
DC-7 Ready for First Flight
DC-7 Ready for First Flight 
DC-6 Preparing for Takeoff
DC-6 Preparing for Takeoff 
Man Standing on the Wing of a DC-5
Man Standing on the Wing of a DC-5 
DC-5 Instrument Panel
DC-5 Instrument Panel 
DC-3 on Tarmac
DC-3 on Tarmac 
DC-6 Ready for Takeoff
DC-6 Ready for Takeoff 
DC-3 Refueling
DC-3 Refueling 
DC-5 Over Santa Monica
DC-5 Over Santa Monica 
Executive DC-3 and Car in Santa Monica
Executive DC-3 and Car in Santa Monica 
Executive DC-3 Ground Maintenance
Executive DC-3 Ground Maintenance 
DC-9 Ready for Takeoff
DC-9 Ready for Takeoff 
DC-6 on the Tarmac
DC-6 on the Tarmac 
DC-4 on Ground
DC-4 on Ground 
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DC-5 Ready for Takeoff

Douglas DC-5 (1939-1941): Development of the DC-5 and the DC-4 began at the same time, but the DC-5 went into production first. The DC-5 was designed as a short-range transport to carry 16 to 22 passengers. Its performance was similar to the DC-3 then being used on longer routes with more passengers. The DC-5 featured a high-wing design and tricycle landing gear. This allowed passengers to step aboard to a level cabin floor just two feet above the ground. The DC-5 was the only Douglas airliner built at the plant in El Segundo, Ca. William E. Boeing bought the first DC-5. He named it Rover and used it as an executive aircraft. The next four went to KLM airlines. World War II resulted in the suspension of commercial aircraft deliveries as production was switched to larger and longer-range military transports. The latest seven DC-5s on the line were delivered to the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps under the designation R3D. 
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Unique identifier BI2414 
Boeing ID lk14 
Type Image 
Size 5996px × 4456px   25MB 
License type RM 
Keywords
1930s
airplanes
blur
clear skies
commercial
commercial passenger planes
copy space
day
engine starts
exteriors
ground shots
historic production status
left front views
monoplanes
nobody
photos
propeller planes
sunshine
tarmac
three-quarter length views
unpainted
vintage / retro
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