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Air Travel in the 1950s
DC-7
Conceptually similar
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Douglas DC-7 in Flight
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Similar tones
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DC-7 in Flight Above Farmland
Douglas DC-7 (1953-1958): On May 18, 1953, Douglas introduced the DC-7, a larger and faster airliner than its DC-4 and DC-6 look-a-like predecessors. The DC-7 was powered by four “turbo-compound” engines, which enabled it to fly nonstop across the United States westbound against prevailing winds - a capability which the airlines of the day had dreamed of for years. A later version, the DC-7C, provided an even greater range capability that enabled it to fly anywhere in the world, thus earning the nickname “Seven Seas.” A total of 338 DC-7s were produced from 1953 to 1958, all for commercial airline customers. TheDC-7 was the last propeller driven airliner built by Douglas and the last built at the Santa Monica plant in Southern California.
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Unique identifier
BI2306
Boeing ID
a3635
Size
5996px × 4512px 25MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1950s
aerial views
air to air
airplanes
commercial
commercial passenger planes
day
exteriors
farmland
flying
full body views
historic production status
monoplanes
nobody
other livery
photos
propeller planes
right front views
scanned from film negative
sunshine
text
viewed from above
vintage / retro
Restrictions
Manage crops
NAME
RATIO
Square
1 : 1
Portrait
2 : 3
Landscape
3 : 2