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747-100 First Flight Takeoff
747-100 First Flight Takeoff 
747-100 Takeoff
747-100 Takeoff 
747-100 Rollout
747-100 Rollout 
747-100 Rollout
747-100 Rollout 
747-100 First Flight Takeoff
747-100 First Flight Takeoff 
747-100 Rollout
747-100 Rollout 
747-100 Rollout
747-100 Rollout 
747-8 Landing on First Flight
747-8 Landing on First Flight 
747-100 Rollout
747-100 Rollout 
747-8 Climbs Skyward on First Flight.
747-8 Climbs Skyward on First Flight. 
First 747-100 in Factory with First Production 747
First 747-100 in Factory with First Production 747 
747-100 Rollout
747-100 Rollout 
First 747-100 Engine Tests for 777
First 747-100 Engine Tests for 777 
747-100 First Flight
747-100 First Flight 
747-100 with 747-200 Windows Painted On
747-100 with 747-200 Windows Painted On 
747-100s on the Flight Line in Front of Mt Rainier
747-100s on the Flight Line in Front of Mt Rainier 
First 747-100 in Flight
First 747-100 in Flight 
Boeing 747-8 Takeoff on First Flight
Boeing 747-8 Takeoff on First Flight 
747SP Landing
747SP Landing 
747-8 Touches Down on First Flight
747-8 Touches Down on First Flight 
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747-100 Landing on First Flight

The fastest commercial airplane in the sky, the gigantic 747 jet can hold up to 568 passengers. It also has the capability to fly up to 7,670 nautical miles. It is 231 feet 10 inches long, and its tail is taller than a six-story building. Since entering service in 1970, it has been produced in more than 20 versions, including freighters, convertibles, combis and many special-use models. 747 airplane variants include model 747-100 jets that became Shuttle Carriers, 747-200B jets modified to become Air Force Ones, a 747 jet airframe used for the Advanced Airborne Command Post (E-4), and a 747-400 Freighter used as a platform for the Airborne Laser (ABL). The new longer-range 747-400ER was launched in 2000 and is available in both passenger and freighter versions. 
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Unique identifier BI23580 
Boeing ID p44332 
Type Image 
Size 5996px × 5134px   29MB 
License type RM 
Keywords
1960s
adults
airplanes
audiences
automobiles
clouds
commercial
commercial passenger planes
copy space
day
exteriors
first flights
flying
full body views
gray skies
ground to air
head on views
jets
large
male
monoplanes
out of production
photos
runways
scanned from film negative
several/groups
tarmac
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