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Conceptually similar
First 747-100 in Flight
First 747-100 in Flight
747-100 Posing as a 747-200 in Flight
747-100 in Flight
First 747-100 in Flight
First 747-100 in Flight
747-100 in Flight
747 #1 in Flight
First 747-100 in Flight
First 747 in Flight
747-100 in Flight
747-100 #1 in Flight
747-100 in Flight
747-100 in Flight
747-100 Painted as a 747-200 in Flight
747-100 #1 in Flight
First 747-100 in Flight
747-100 in Flight
747-100 First Flight
747-100 Painted as a 747-200 in Flight
Similar tones
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Origninal 747-100 in Flight
The mid-1960s saw the development and introduction of many new jetliners. None, however, has matched the dramatic impact of the 747. The incentive for creating the giant 747 came from reductions in air fares, an explosion in air-passenger traffic, the availability of larger thrust engines, and increasingly crowded skies. In addition, Boeing had already developed the design concepts and technology of such an airplane because the company had bid on, but lost, the contract for a gigantic military transport, the C-5A. The 747's final design was offered in three configurations: all passenger, all cargo and a convertible passenger/freighter model. The 747 was truly monumental in size. The massive airplane required construction of the 200-million-cubic-foot 747 assembly plant in Everett, Wash., the world's largest building (by volume). The fuselage of the original 747 was 225 feet long; the tail as tall as a six-story building. Pressurized, it carried a ton of air. The cargo hold had room for 3,400 pieces of baggage and could be unloaded in seven minutes. The total wing area was larger than a basketball court.
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Unique identifier
BI29404
Boeing ID
fa217700
Type
Image
Size
5100px × 5100px 74MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1960s
air to air
airplanes
blue
blue skies
clear skies
commercial
commercial passenger planes
copy space
exteriors
flying
full body views
haze
jets
left side views
monoplanes
mountains
nobody
out of production
photos
red
scanned from film negative
snow
sunshine
text
tilt views
vivid color
white
wilderness
Restrictions