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DC-6 Douglas Markings
DC-6 Douglas Markings 
DC-6 in Douglas Markings
DC-6 in Douglas Markings 
DC-6 in Flight with Douglas Markings
DC-6 in Flight with Douglas Markings 
DC-6 in Douglas Markings
DC-6 in Douglas Markings 
DC-6  in Douglas Markings
DC-6 in Douglas Markings 
DC-6 in Flight
DC-6 in Flight 
DC-6 in Flight
DC-6 in Flight 
DC-6 in Flight
DC-6 in Flight 
DC-6 in Flight
DC-6 in Flight 
DC-6 in Flight
DC-6 in Flight 
DC-6 in Flight
DC-6 in Flight 
DC-6 in Flight
DC-6 in Flight 
Douglas DC-6B in Flight
Douglas DC-6B in Flight 
DC-6 in Flight
DC-6 in Flight 
DC-6 Nose Section
DC-6 Nose Section 
DC-6 on Ground with Passengers
DC-6 on Ground with Passengers 
DC-6 on Tarmac
DC-6 on Tarmac 
DC-6 with Passengers
DC-6 with Passengers 
DC-6 in Flight
DC-6 in Flight 
DC-6 in Flight
DC-6 in Flight 
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DC-6 Douglas Markings

Douglas DC-6 (1946-1958): Nearly identical to the DC-4 in appearance, the DC-6 was first conceived as a long-range military transport. The plane made its maiden flight on February 15, 1946. The key difference between the DC-4 and DC-6 was the DC-6’s larger engines, which were twice as powerful as the engines on the DC-4. The DC-6 was the first Douglas airliner with a pressurized cabin, which enabled it to fly higher and faster, thus taking its passengers “over the weather.” The DC-6 was the most economical commercial aircraft of the propeller era. Its operating costs were among the lowest until jetliners came on the scene. Military versions were produced under the designations C-118 (Air Force) and R6D (Navy). President Harry Truman chose a DC-6 for official use, and christened it the “Independence,” for his hometown in Missouri. During its 12-year production run, Douglas delivered 537 DC-6s, plus 167 military versions. 
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Unique identifier BI2462 
Boeing ID k6doug-f1-24 
Type Image 
Size 5996px × 4654px   79MB 
License type RM 
Keywords
1940s
air to air
airplanes
blur
clear skies
clouds
commercial
commercial passenger planes
copy space
day
exteriors
flying
full body views
gray
historic production status
monoplanes
muted colors
nobody
other livery
photos
propeller planes
right side views
silver color
sunshine
text
unpainted
vintage / retro
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