Close
The page header's logo
Boeing Images 
Cart (0)
Login / Register
0
Selected 
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
 Click here to refresh results
 Click here to refresh results
Go to Login page
 Hide details
play button
Linked assets
DC-8
DC-8 
Action button
Conceptually similar
Super 62 DC-8 in Flight
Super 62 DC-8 in Flight 
DC-8 in Flight
DC-8 in Flight 
DC-7 in Flight
DC-7 in Flight 
DC-6 in Flight
DC-6 in Flight 
DC-4 in Flight
DC-4 in Flight 
DC-6 in Flight
DC-6 in Flight 
DC-4 in Flight
DC-4 in Flight 
DC-8 in Flight
DC-8 in Flight 
DC-9 on its First Flight
DC-9 on its First Flight 
DC-8 Nacelles in Flight
DC-8 Nacelles in Flight 
DC-7 in Flight Above Farmland
DC-7 in Flight Above Farmland 
DC-8-61 in Flight
DC-8-61 in Flight 
DC-1 in Flight Above Rural Area
DC-1 in Flight Above Rural Area 
Super DC-3 in Flight
Super DC-3 in Flight 
DC-9 in Flight
DC-9 in Flight 
Douglas DC-7 in Flight
Douglas DC-7 in Flight 
Douglas DC-7 in Flight
Douglas DC-7 in Flight 
DC-8 Series 50 in Flight
DC-8 Series 50 in Flight 
DC-7B in Flight
DC-7B in Flight 
Douglas Sleeper Transport In Flight
Douglas Sleeper Transport In Flight 
Action button
Similar tones
similar-image
similar-image
similar-image
similar-image
similar-image
similar-image
View images with similar tones
Action button

DC-8 Flight

Douglas DC-8 (1958-1972): The Boeing 367-80 prototype jet transport had already made its first flight before Douglas decided to proceed with a jetliner of its own. The DC-8 was the first jet in the DC series and the first Douglas airliner to be completely built at the company’s plant in Long Beach, Ca. Powered by four turbofan jet engines and capable of speeds nearly 600 miles per hour, the DC-8 made its first flight on May 30, 1958. During a 14-year production run, the DC-8 went through seven major variants for a total of 556 aircraft. The plane set world records for speed, cargo capacity and range. During a test dive in 1962, a DC-8 Series 53 became the first commercial airliner to exceed the speed of sound. With a maximum capacity of 259 passengers, the DC-8 Super 63 was the largest commercial jet flying until the Boeing 747 entered service in 1970. 
 Add to lightbox
 Add to cart
Unique identifier BI23416 
Boeing ID dac678 
Type Image 
Size 5996px × 4808px   82MB 
License type RM 
Keywords
1950s
air to air
airplanes
brown
commercial
commercial passenger planes
copy space
day
deserts
exteriors
farmland
flying
full body views
grid patterns
haze
head on views
jets
monoplanes
nobody
other livery
out of production
photos
sunshine
symmetry
urban areas
viewed from above
white
Restrictions