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Model 307 Stratoliner
Conceptually similar
Rebuilt 307 Stratoliner Taking Off from Boeing Field
Rebuilt 307 Stratoliner Taking Off
Restored 307 Stratoliner at Boeing Field
Restored 307 Stratoliner at Boeing Field
Restored 307 Stratoliner at Boeing Field
Restored 307 Stratoliner at Boeing Field
Restored 307 Stratoliner at Boeing Field
Restored 307 Stratoliner at Boeing Field
Restored 307 Stratoliner at Boeing Field
Restored 307 Stratoliner on the Runway at Boeing Field
Restored 307 Stratoliner on the Runway at Boeing Field
307 Stratoliner (TWA) Landing at Boeing Field
Restored 307 Stratoliner on Runway at Boeing Field
Restored 307 Stratoliner at Boeing Field
Restored 307 Stratoliner Tail
Restored 307 Stratoliner on the Runway at Boeing Field
Restored Boeing 307 Stratoliner
Restored 307 Stratoliner
Restored 307 Stratoliner Tail Door
307 Stratoliner Manufacturing
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307 Stratoliner Taking Off from Boeing Field
The Boeing 307 Stratoliners had noble names: Rainbow, Comet, Flying Cloud, Cherokee, Comanche, Zuni, Apache, and Navaho. Although only nine entered service, the Stratoliners set new standards for speed and comfort. Until Stratoliners entered service in 1939, travelers were subject to bone-rattling turbulence, unless the airliner was lucky enough to encounter perfectly calm weather. Cabin pressurization of the Stratoliner allowed its passengers to soar above the storms for the first time. After the United States entered World War II, five 307B Stratoliners were drafted into the Army Transport Command as C-75s and by war's end had made 3,000 accident-free transatlantic crossings.
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Unique identifier
BI29520
Boeing ID
sj-2
Type
Image
Size
6000px × 4800px 27MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1930s
airplanes
ascending
buildings
clouds
commercial
commercial passenger planes
day
exteriors
flying
full body views
ground to air
historic production status
left side views
monoplanes
nobody
photos
propeller planes
runways
scanned from film negative
sunshine
takeoffs
tarmac
unpainted
viewed from below
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