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Conceptually similar
767 AWACS on Tarmac
767 AWACS in Aircraft Hangar
AWACS Rotodome Installation
AWACS Manufacturing
767 AWACS In Flight
767 AWACS, First 767 Military Derivative Off the Production Line
Four 767 AWACS Together
E-767 AWACS Interior
Boeing-Built 767 AWACS Enters Operational Service for Japan
767 Tanker/Transport and 767 AWACS in Flight
E3 AWACS on Flight Apron
Five AWACS on Flight Apron
E-767 AWACS in Assembly
JASDF E-767 AWACS in Flight
AWACS Takeoff
E-767 AWACS over Mt. Rainier
AWACS in Flight
E-767 AWACS in Factory
First 767 AWACS Body Join
JASDF E-767 AWACS
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767 AWACS Without Rotodome on Tarmac
Until May 1991, the Airborne Warning and Control System (AWACS) was carried on board militarized 707s. In December of the same year Boeing announced it would offer a modified 767 commercial jetliner as the platform for the system. The first 767 AWACS, designated E-767, made its first flight Aug. 9, 1996, with the distinctive 30-foot rotodome mounted atop its fuselage. AWACS is the world's standard for airborne early warning systems. It supplies tactical and air defense forces with surveillance, and command and control communications. Its flexible, multimode radar, in a rotating radome mounted above the fuselage, allows AWACS to separate maritime and airborne targets from ground and sea clutter. It has a 360-degree view of an area and at operating altitudes can detect, identify and display targets more than 200 miles away.
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Unique identifier
BI212468
Boeing ID
r5170
Size
5100px × 5100px 74MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1990s
airborne command
airplanes
clouds
copy space
currently in production
day
electronic warfare
exteriors
gray
gray skies
green
ground shots
jets
left front views
military
monoplanes
nobody
photos
scanned from film negative
silver color
tarmac
taxiing
three-quarter length views
unpainted
Restrictions
Manage crops
NAME
RATIO
Square
1 : 1
Portrait
2 : 3
Landscape
3 : 2