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DC-9 on the Ground

Douglas DC-9 (1965-1982): The DC-9 jetliner was designed to serve smaller airports and shorter routes than those served by the larger Boeing 727. It was developed to be a jet-age DC-3, bringing reliable jet service to any airport in the world. Smaller than the DC-8, the baseline DC-9 carried fewer passengers than some versions of the propeller driven DC-6 and DC-7 airliners. The DC-9 made its first flight on February 25, 1965, and entered service with Delta Airlines just 10 months later. It quickly became one of the most popular airlines ever built. In addition, the U.S. military ordered specially modified versions of the DC-9. The C-9A Nightingale was used by the Air Force to transport sick and injured military personnel. The Navy and Marine Corps flew the C-9B Skytrain II. Three executive transport versions were delivered to the Air Force as the VC-9C. With 976 aircraft produced in eight variations, the DC-9 ended its 17 year production run in 1982. Today, more than 800 DC-9s are still flying. 
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Unique identifier BI23386 
Boeing ID dc945c7 
Type Image 
Size 5996px × 4802px   82MB 
License type RM 
Keywords
1960s
airplanes
close-ups
commercial
commercial passenger planes
day
exteriors
fuselages
gray
gray skies
ground shots
head on views
jets
monoplanes
nobody
nose sections
other livery
out of production
photos
right front views
sunshine
tarmac
text
three-quarter length views
tilt views
white
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