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737-100 on its First Flight

In 1967, the smaller, short-range 737 twinjet was the logical airplane to complement the 707 and the 727. There was increasing demand for transports in its category, but the 737 faced heavy competition from the Douglas DC-9 and the British Aircraft Corp. BAC-111. To save production time, and get the plane on the market as soon as possible, Boeing gave the 737 the same upper-lobe fuselage as the 707 and 727, so the same upper-deck cargo pallets could be used for all three jets. The 737 later adopted the 727's cargo convertible features, which allowed the interior to be changed from passenger to cargo use in the 737-200 series. 
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Unique identifier BI219284 
Boeing ID k14308 
Type Image 
Size 2200px × 1700px   10MB 
License type RM 
Keywords
1960s
aerial views
air to air
airfields
airplanes
AIRPORTS
commercial
commercial passenger planes
day
exteriors
farmland
first flights
flying
full body views
haze
jets
monoplanes
nobody
out of production
photos
right front views
rollout livery
runways
scanned from film negative
sunshine
text
viewed from above
wilderness
yellow
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