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Conceptually similar
Dash 80 and 727s on Flight Apron
Dash 80 and 727s in Boeing Hangar
Dash 80 and 727s in Hangar
First 727-100 on Assembly Line
First 727-100 on Assembly Line
747-100s on the Flight Line in Front of Mt Rainier
Boeing 7-Series Jets on the Flight Line at Boeing Field, July 1983
Boeing 7-Series Jets on the Flight Line at Boeing Field, July 1983
Boeing 7-Series Jets on the Flight Line at Boeing Field, July 1983
Boeing 7-Series Jets on the Flight Line at Boeing Field, July 1983
Boeing 7-Series Jets on the Flight Line at Boeing Field, July 1983
Boeing 7-Series Jets on the Flight Line at Boeing Field, July 1983
Boeing 7-Series Jets on the Flight Line at Boeing Field, July 1983
Boeing 7-Series Jets on the Flight Line at Boeing Field, July 1983
Boeing 7-Series Jets on the Flight Line at Boeing Field, July 1983
Boeing 7-Series Jets on the Flight Line at Boeing Field, July 1983
Boeing 7-Series Jets on the Flight Line at Boeing Field, July 1983
Boeing Field Flight Line
Boeing Field Flight Line
727-100 in Flight
Similar tones
View images with similar tones
First and Second Boeing 727s on Boeing Flight Line with 707s
The first 727 rolled out Nov. 27, 1962, bearing the same lemon-yellow and copper-brown color scheme as the Dash 80. To help spur sales, Boeing sent a 727 on a 76,000-mile tour of 26 countries. Originally, Boeing planned to build 250 of the planes. However, after being shown to the world, they proved so popular (especially after the larger 727-200 model, which carried up to 189 passengers, was introduced) that a total of 1,832 were produced at the Renton plant. The 727 was the only Boeing-built trijet in its time. It was designed to operate out of small airports with shorter runways than were used by 707s. The 131-passenger trijet also was the first Boeing commercial jetliner to use an auxiliary power unit (APU), a small gas turbine that eliminated the need for ground power or starting equipment at small airports when the main engines were shut off. All 727s carried self-contained, hydraulically operated stairs, which, combined with the APU, could make the airplane independent of ground equipment. The 727 jet also was built as a freighter and as a ''quick change'' version, which airlines could convert from a passenger transport to a freighter, or a combination of both, as they chose.
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Unique identifier
BI29128
Boeing ID
k9817
Type
Image
Size
5100px × 3950px 57MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1960s
abundance
airfields
airplanes
commercial airline livery
commercial passenger planes
day
exteriors
flight lines
full body views
gray
gray skies
ground shots
haze
jets
maintenance
monoplanes
nobody
out of production
perspective lines
photos
product families
progress
repetition
right side views
scanned from film negative
sunrise
tarmac
text
three-quarter length views
viewed from above
wet
yellow
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