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William E. Boeing and William M. Allen Inspect the Dash 80 Assembly
William Allen and Bertha Boeing Christen Dash 80
Renton Factory Workers Begin Construction of the Dash 80
Painting the Dash 80 Nose
Dash 80 Rollout Ceremony
Dash 80 and 727s in Boeing Hangar
Dash 80 Rollout
Dash 80 Rollout
Dash 80 Parked with KC-97
Dash 80 on Renton Tarmac
Dash 80 and 727s in Hangar
Dash 80 707 Prototype Rollout
Tex Johnston in the Flight Deck of the Dash 80
Dash 80 707 Prototype Prior to Rollout
Dash 80 Engine Maintenance
Dash 80 and 727s on Flight Apron
Dash 80 and B-52 Fly Over KC-135 Rollout, with KC-97 in Background
Tex Johnston and the Dash 80 Crew with William M. Allen
Tex Johnston and the Dash 80 Crew with William M. Allen
Dash 80, Prototype of the 707, Takes its First Flight
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Boeing Engineers with the Dash 80
With no orders or customer commitments, Boeing spent the equivalent of all its post-World War II profit to develop the Dash 80. Explaining that decision in 1954, then company President Bill Allen simply said it was time somebody "got jet transport off of paper and into the air." The airplane demonstrated the advantages jet engines offered over propeller-driven engines, and propelled commercial aviation into the jet age.
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Unique identifier
BI219782
Boeing ID
p16378
Type
Image
Size
5250px × 4174px 20MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1950s
adults
airplanes
business executives
businesspeople
commercial
engineers
engines
factories
full body views
ground shots
half-length views
hangars
historic production status
inspecting
interiors
jets
male
manufacturing
military
monoplanes
occupations and work
one of a kind aircraft
photos
propulsion systems
prototypes
right side views
text
three people
vintage / retro
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