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First 747-100 in Factory
First 747-100 in Factory 
747-100 #1 in Factory with Another 747
747-100 #1 in Factory with Another 747 
First 747-100 in Factory with First Production 747
First 747-100 in Factory with First Production 747 
First Production 747-100 in Assembly
First Production 747-100 in Assembly 
First Production 747-100 in Assembly
First Production 747-100 in Assembly 
First Production 747-100 in Assembly
First Production 747-100 in Assembly 
747-100 Wing Riveting
747-100 Wing Riveting 
747-100s in Assembly
747-100s in Assembly 
747 Mock Up Class III
747 Mock Up Class III 
Early 747-100 Body Join
Early 747-100 Body Join 
First Production 747-100 in Assembly
First Production 747-100 in Assembly 
First 747-100 Body Join
First 747-100 Body Join 
First 747-100 Body Join
First 747-100 Body Join 
First 747-100 Body Join
First 747-100 Body Join 
Early 747-100 Final Body Join
Early 747-100 Final Body Join 
747-100 Final Body Join
747-100 Final Body Join 
747-100 Rollout at Everett
747-100 Rollout at Everett 
747-100 Rollout at Everett
747-100 Rollout at Everett 
First 747-100 Body Join
First 747-100 Body Join 
Early 747-100 Manufacturing
Early 747-100 Manufacturing 
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747-100 Mock Up in Everett Factory

The 747 was truly monumental in size. The massive airplane required construction of the 200-million-cubic-foot 747 assembly plant in Everett, WA, the world's largest building (by volume). The fuselage of the original 747 was 225 feet long; the tail as tall as a six-story building. Pressurized, it carried a ton of air. The cargo hold had room for 3,400 pieces of baggage and could be unloaded in seven minutes. The total wing area was larger than a basketball court. Yet, the entire global navigation system weighed less than a modern laptop computer. 
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Unique identifier BI225383 
Boeing ID k14654 
Type Image 
Size 3000px × 2400px   20MB 
License type RM 
Keywords
1960s
airplanes
commercial
commercial passenger planes
factories
full body views
fuselages
glare
gray
grid patterns
ground shots
interiors
jets
large
manufacturing
monoplanes
nose sections
out of production
perspective lines
photos
right front views
several/groups
silver color
stairs, lifts and ladders
structural systems
text
unpainted
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