Close
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
Conceptually similar
DC-8 Super 61 Fuselage and Wing Mating
DC-8 on Tarmac
DC-8 Takeoff, First Flight
DC-10 Rollout in Long Beach
MD-90 at Long Beach Paint Hangar
DC-8 Manufacturing
DC-8 Rollout
DC-8 Rollout
DC-8 Super 63 Rollout
DC-8 Super 61 Rollout
DC-9 in Front of Hangar, Long Beach, CA
MD-90 at Long Beach
DC-8 Series 63 Manufacturing
717-200 Moving Line at Long Beach
DC-2 Flying over Long Beach
C-47 Skytrain Employees with Number 2,000
DC-8 Takeoff
DC-8 Nose
DC-10 in Final Assembly
Fly DC Jets Signage above 717-200 at Long Beach Factory
Similar tones
View images with similar tones
DC-8 Number 4 at Long Beach
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
BI23448
Boeing ID
estc919
Type
Image
Size
5996px × 4782px 82MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1950s
airplanes
blue
clouds
commercial
commercial passenger planes
day
exteriors
glare
gray
ground shots
jets
maintenance
monoplanes
nobody
other livery
out of production
photos
right front views
sunshine
tarmac
text
three-quarter length views
vignetting
white
wires and cables
Restrictions