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777-200LR in New Livery
Boeing 777-200LR, World's Longest Range Airplane, Makes First Flight
777-200LR Rolls Out of Boeing's Everett Paint Hangar
777-200LR Rolls Out of Boeing's Everett Paint Hangar
Boeing Unveils 777-200LR Worldliner - Longest Range Commercial Jet
First 777 Freighter Taxies on Paine Field Runway on the Day of its First Flight
New Boeing Livery is Applied to a 777-200LR at the Everett Paint Hangar
777-200LR in New Livery
New Boeing Livery is Applied to a 777-200LR at the Everett Paint Hangar
777-200LR Worldliner New Livery Rollout
777-200LR Worldliner New Livery Rollout
777-200LR Worldliner Taxiing
First Boeing 777 Freighter First Landing
First Boeing 777 Freighter Taxies Towards its First Flight
777-200LR Worldliner in Paint Hangar for New Livery
777-200LR Worldliner New Livery Rollout
777-200LR Worldliner New Livery Rollout
777-200LR Worldliner in Paint Hangar for New Livery
777-200LR Worldliner in Paint Hangar for New Livery
First Boeing 777 Freighter Taxies on the Runway Towards its First Flight
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Boeing 777-200LR Worldliner Completes Taxi Test
Boeing pilots taxied the new 777-200LR Worldliner for the first time on March 4, 2005, at Everett, WA. The taxi test was one of the final steps before the world's longest range commercial airplane made its first flight. Boeing's newest 777, capable of connecting virtually any two cities in the world, made its inaugural flight on Tuesday, March 8, 2005 from Paine Field in Everett, WA. Captains Suzanna Darcy-Hennemann, 777-200LR project pilot, and Capt. Frank Santoni, chief 777 program pilot, completed the taxi test, one of many being conducted as the airplane prepared for first flight. The test provides data about the airplane's braking performance and handling characteristics on the ground. It also ensures all the systems perform as designed while the airplane is in motion, providing the flight crews final validation before first flight. The pilots during the taxi tests conducted taxi runs at speeds of up to 70 knots, or approximately 80 miles per hour (130 kilometers per hour). The airplane's gross weight for this test was 425,000 pounds (192,777 kilograms).
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Unique identifier
BI28878
Boeing ID
k63256-3
Type
Image
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5100px × 3319px 48MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1st/first
2000s
achievement
airfields
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blue
brown
commercial
commercial passenger planes
day
exteriors
full body views
ground shots
jets
left side views
nobody
photos
sunshine
taxiing
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