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Boeing 747

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{| align=right Image:Singapore.b747.london.750pix.jpg thumb|right|300px|Singapore Airlines Boeing 747-412 |} The '''Boeing 747''', commonly called the '''Jumbo Jet''', is one of the most recognizable modern airliners and is the largest airliner as of 2006 currently in airline service. First flown commercially in 1970, it held the size record for more than 35 years, although it has been surpassed by the Airbus A380 (due to enter service in late 2006). The Soviet Union Soviet-built Antonov An-225, a cargo aircraft transport, remains the world's largest aircraft in service (the Hughes H-4 Hercules Spruce Goose, though, had a larger wing-span). The four-engine 747, produced by Boeing Commercial Aircraft, uses a double decker two-deck configuration, where the small upper deck is usually used for business-class passengers[http://www.united.com/page/article/0,6722,3071,00.html]. A typical three-class layout accommodates 416 passengers while a two-class layout accommodates a maximum of 524 passengers. A single-class layout could seat up to 624 passengers according to the airplane [http://www.boeing.com/assocproducts/aircompat/acaps/7474sec2.pdf description] by Boeing. The hump created by the upper deck has made the 747 a highly recognizable icon of air travel. The 747 flies at high-subsonic speeds (typically 0.85 Mach number Mach or 570 Miles per hour mph or 910 km/h) and features intercontinental range (8,430 statute miles, or 13,570 km, for the Boeing 747-400 747-400 version). In some configurations this is sufficient to fly non-stop from New York to Hong Kong — a third of the way around the globe. In 1989, a Qantas 747-400 flew non-stop from London to Sydney, a distance of 11,185 miles (18,000 km), in 20 hours and 9 minutes, although this was a delivery flight with no passengers or freight aboard. As of 2006 By February 2006, a total of 1430 aircraft have been built or ordered in various 747 configurations, making it a very profitable product for Boeing [http://active.boeing.com/commercial/orders/displaystandardreport.cfm?cboCurrentModel=747&optReportType=AllModels&cboAllModel=747&ViewReportF=View+Report]. image:virgin.b747-400.g-vbig.taxi.arp.jpg thumb|right|300px|Virgin Atlantic Airways Boeing 747-400 "Tinker Belle" taxiing to the take off point at London Heathrow Airport

History


Development
Image:Boeing 747 prototype.JPG thumb|175px|left|The prototype 747, "City of Everett", at the [[Museum of Flight in Seattle, Washington Seattle, Washington.]] The 747 was born from the explosion of air travel in the 1960s. The era of commercial jet transportation, led by the enormous popularity of the Boeing 707, had revolutionized long distance travel and made possible the concept of the "global village." Boeing had already developed a study for a very large airplane while bidding on a US military contract for a huge airlifter. Boeing lost the contract to Lockheed's C-5 Galaxy but came under pressure from its most loyal airline customer, Pan Am, to develop a giant passenger plane that would be over twice the size of the 707. In 1966 Boeing proposed a preliminary configuration for the airliner, to be called the 747. Pan Am ordered 25 of the initial 100 series. The original design was a full-length double-decker fuselage. Issues with evacuation routes caused this idea to be scrapped in favor of a Wide-body aircraft wide-body design. At the time, it was widely thought that the 747 would be replaced in the future with an SST (supersonic transport) design. In a shrewd move, Boeing designed the 747 so that it could easily be adapted to carry freight. Boeing knew that if and when sales of the passenger version dried up (see below regarding the future sales of the 747), the plane could remain in production as a cargo aircraft. The cockpit was moved to a shortened upper deck so that a nose cone loading door could be included, thus creating the 747's distinctive "bulge". The supersonic transports, including the Concorde and Boeing's never-produced Boeing 2707 2707, never lived up to expectations, such planes being too expensive to operate profitably at a time when fuel prices were soaring, and also there were difficulties of operating such aircraft due to regulations regarding flying supersonic over land. The 747 was expected to become obsolete after sales of 400 units. But the 747 outlived many of its critics and production passed the 1,000 mark in 1993. The expected slow-down in sales of the passenger version in favour of the freighter model has only been realized in the early 2000s, around 2 decades overdue. The development of the 747 was a huge undertaking. Boeing did not have a facility large enough to assemble the giant aircraft, so the company built an all-new assembly building near Everett, Washington. The factory is the largest building by volume ever built. Pratt and Whitney developed a massive high-bypass turbofan engine, the Pratt & Whitney JT9D JT9D, which was initially used exclusively with the 747. To appease concerns about the safety and flyability of such a massive aircraft, the 747 was designed with four backup hydraulic systems, split control surfaces, multiple structural redundancy, and sophisticated flaps that allowed it to use standard-length runways. During the flight certification period, Boeing built an unusual training device known as "Waddell's Wagon" (named after the 747 test pilot, Jack Waddell) which consisted of a mock-up cockpit mounted on the roof of a truck. It was intended to train pilots on how to taxi the aircraft from the high upper deck position. Boeing had promised to deliver the 747 to Pan Am by 1970, meaning that it had less than four years to develop, build and test the airplane. Work progressed at such a breakneck pace that all those who worked on the development of the 747 were given the nickname "The Incredibles". The massive cost of developing the 747 and building the Everett factory meant that Boeing had gambled its very existence on the 747's success, and the company was nearly bankrupted in the early 1970s. The gamble paid dividends, however, and Boeing enjoyed a monopoly in the very large passenger aircraft industry for years. In fact, the record and benchmark set by the 747 would only be surpased, more than 35 years after its first delivery, by the Airbus A380, built by Boeing's rival.

In service
Image:delta.b747.anet.arp.750pix.jpg thumb|right|Delta Boeing 747, operated by Pan Am, at London Heathrow Airport in May 1974. Initially, many airlines regarded the 747 with skepticism. McDonnell Douglas (which now has been absorbed by Boeing) and Lockheed, were working on wide-body three-engine "tri-jets", which were significantly smaller than the proposed 747. Many airlines believed the 747 would prove too large for an average long distance flight, investing instead in tri-jets. There were also concerns that the 747 would not be compatible with existing airport infrastructure, similar concerns that the Airbus A380 currently faces, however compounded even more due to its double-decker feature. Another issue raised by the airlines was fuel efficiency. A three-engine airliner burns significantly less fuel per flight than a four-engine, and with airlines trying to lower costs, fuel efficiency was an important issue that would briefly return to haunt Boeing in the 1970s. Many of the airlines' fears came to bear in the 1970s. The Arab oil crisis and economic stagnation in the United States lowered the number of airline passengers and made it difficult for airlines to fill their new 747s. American Airlines replaced coach seats on its 747s with piano bars in an attempt to attract more customers: eventually, it relegated its 747s to cargo service and then sold them. Continental Airlines also removed its 747s from service after several years. The advent of smaller, more efficient widebodies, starting with the trijet McDonnell Douglas DC-10 DC-10 and Lockheed Tristar L-1011 and followed by the twinjet Boeing 767 767 and Airbus A300 A300, took away much of the 747's original market, especially as airline deregulation made point-to-point international service more common. Other airlines that have removed 747s from their fleet include Air Canada, Aer Lingus, Scandinavian Airlines System SAS, TAP Air Portugal TAP, and Olympic Airways. However, many international airlines continued to use the 747 on their busiest routes. The type remained popular among Asian airlines for short and medium-range flights between major cities: in Japan, domestic airlines continue to pack 747s to their maximum passenger capacity. Elsewhere, 747s remain popular on long-range trunk routes, such as transoceanic flights and the Kangaroo routes between Europe and Oceania. The largest fleet of 747s today belongs to Japan Airlines, at approximately 78 (series -200s, -300s and 44 -400s). British Airways has the next largest fleet of 747s comprised of 56 747-400s.

Future of the 747
Many different stretching schemes for the 747 have been proposed, but the only design to be adopted is 2005's 747-8. The 747-X program was launched in 1996 as Boeing's response to the Airbus Airbus A380 A3XX proposal. The 747-X would have consisted of the 747-500X and 747-600X, seating up to 800 passengers. General Electric and P&W formed the Engine Alliance and designed the Engine Alliance GP7200 GP7200 turbofan to power the stretched 747. Airlines, however, would have preferred Boeing to develop an all-new design instead of an updated 747, and the plan was dropped after a few months. After the Airbus A380 was formally launched in 2000, Boeing reexamined its 747-X studies but instead devoted its energies to the Boeing Sonic Cruiser Sonic Cruiser, and then later on the Boeing 787 787 after the Sonic Cruiser program was put on hold for an undefined period. Some of the ideas developed for the 747-X were, however, used in the production of the 747-400ER. In early 2004, Boeing rolled out tentative plans for what it called the '''747 Advanced'''. Similar in nature to the 747-X plans, the stretched 747 Advanced uses advanced technology from the Boeing 787 787 to modernize the design and its systems. On November 14 2005, Boeing announced it was launching the 747 Advanced as the 747-8. [http://www.boeing.com/news/releases/2005/q4/nr_051114h.html] Eventually, the 747 (in all forms) will be replaced by a clean-sheet aircraft dubbed "Boeing Y3 Y3".

Variants
The 747 exists as several models:

747-100
Image:Pan_Am_747_LAX.jpg thumb|right|250px|747-100 in livery of launch customer Pan Am The first model of the jet, the '''747-100''', rolled out of the new Everett facility on 2 September 1968. The prototype, named "City of Everett", first flew on February 9 1969, and on January 1 1970 the 747-100 entered service with launch customer Pan American World Airways. It was later replaced by the '''747-100B''', a very similar aircraft with a stronger airframe and undercarriage design. The basic 100 has a range of about 4,500 miles (7,200 km) with full load. The US military designation for 747-100 is C-19. The very first 747-100s off the line were built with three upper-deck windows to accommodate upstairs lounge areas. A little later, as airlines began to use the upper-deck for premium passenger seating instead of lounge space, Boeing offered a ten window upper deck as an option, and it quickly became the standard. Some 100s were even retrofitted with the new configuration. Some 747-100 aircraft were converted into freighters and designated '''747-100SF'''.

747SR
Boeing developed the '''747SR''' as a 'Short Range' variant of the -100. The SR has a lower fuel capacity, but can carry more passengers--up to 498 passengers in early versions and more than 550 passengers in later models. The 747SR has a modified body structure to accommodate a greater number of take-offs and landings. Later on, short range versions were developed also of the -100B and the -300. The SR aircraft are primarily used on domestic flights in Japan. Two 747-100B/SRs were delivered to Japan Airlines (JAL) with a stretched upper deck to accommodate more passengers. This is known as the "SUD" (stretched upper deck) modification. Currently ANA All Nippon Airlines (ANA) is operating 747SR on domestic Japanese routes with 455-456 seats but will retire the aircraft on 10 March 2006. JAL operates its 747-100B/SR/SUD aircraft with 563 seats on domestic routes and plans for retirement in the third quarter of 2006. JAL and JALways have also been operating the -300SRs on leisure routes domestically as well as to other parts of Asia and Australia. One ex-JAL '''747SR-46''', registered N911NA, is currently being operated by NASA as a Shuttle Carrier Aircraft Space Shuttle Carrier Aircraft. (It joined an ex-American Airlines '''747-123''' in 1988 due to a recommendation from the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster Challenger Rogers Commission Report inquiry board to have two SCAs, and the aircraft first carried a shuttle in 1991.)

747-200
Introduced in 1971, and further improved over successive years, the '''747-200''' had more powerful engines and higher takeoff weights than the -100, allowing it to fly further. A few early build -200s retained the three window configuration of the -100, but most were built with a ten window configuration. As on the -100, a stretched upper deck modification was offered much later. KLM remains the only airline to retrofit their -200s with the SUD option. The last models of the 200, the 200B, built in the late 1980s, have a full load range of about 6,700 miles (10,800 km). The US military designation for 747-200B is C-25. The USAF only operates two C-25, in VIP configuration (VC-25A). These two aircraft, tail numbers 28000 and 29000 are better known as Air Force One when the President of the United States is onboard. The '''747-200C Convertible''' and '''747-200F Freighter''' variants were designed to carry air freight. The 747-200F is a pure freighter, while the 747-200C is a "convertible" aircraft that can carry either passengers or freight. A sub-variant is unofficially called the '''747-200M''' and is a "combi" aircraft that can carry both at the same time. Like the 100, many 200s have been given a new lease on life as freight aircraft. The '''747-200B''' is an improved version of the 747-200, with increased fuel capacity and more powerful engines. It comes in a combi version as well.
- Seat diagrams for 747-200

747SP
Image:SOFIA.jpg thumb|right|250px|747SP refitted as the [[SOFIA astronomical observatory]] The '''747SP''', or "Special Performance," was first delivered in 1976. The SP was largely a stop-gap model to compete with the McDonnell Douglas DC-10 and Lockheed L-1011. The 747 was simply too big for many routes, and Boeing did not have a mid-sized widebody to compete in the segment of the market that the DC-10 and L-1011 had created. Crippled by the huge costs it had incurred in developing both the 737 and 747 in the late 1960s, Boeing could not afford to develop an all-new design, so instead it shortened the 747 and re-optimized it for speed and range at the expense of capacity. Apart from having a shorter fuselage, the 747SP differs from other 747 variants in having a larger tail surface and larger single-piece flap (aircraft) flaps on the trailing edges (other 747s use triple flaps). The SP could typically only accommodate 220 passengers in a 3-class cabin, but could fly over 6,500 miles (10,500 km) at speeds of up to 610 Miles per hour mph (980 km/h). Some airline insiders call it the "74 Short" or "Baby Jumbo" because of its shortened fuselage, and stubby appearance. Originally designated '''747SB''' (standing for Short Body), by Boeing, the airlines had Boeing change the production designation to 747SP. The 747SP was the longest-range airliner available until the 747-400 entered service in 1988. It found its way into the fleets of American Airlines, Qantas, and Pan American World Airways Pan Am, airlines that needed its range for trans-South Pacific routes (American later used its 747SPs for services to Tokyo). Pan Am also used their 747SPs on their trans-pacific flights to and from Hong Kong. Prior to the 1979 Islamic revolution, Iran Air used the type on their daily Tehran-New York flight, at the time the longest non-stop airline route in the world. The 747SP was also used South African Airways on flights from Johannesburg to London, during the Apartheid years, when that airline's aircraft were not allowed to fly over African countries and had to fly around the Bulge of Africa. The extra range allowed aircraft to cover the additional distance. With seven of these jets, South African Airways SAA had the largest fleet of 747SP's in the world at the time. For all its technical achievements, the SP never sold as well as Boeing hoped. Only 45 were ever built and most that are still in service are used by operators in the Middle East. One special 747SP is the SOFIA astronomical observatory, where the airframe was modified to carry a 2.5-meter-diameter infrared reflecting telescope to high-altitude, the limit to which infrared penetrates the atmosphere. Originally delivered to Pan Am and titled "Clipper Lindbergh", NASA has displayed the name in Pan Am script on the plane. It will fly again in late 2005. The 747SP was originally intended to be known as the 747SB (the SB logically standing for "Short Body", before it was nicknamed "Sutter's Balloon" by Boeing employees, being named after 747 chief engineer Joe Sutter). Eventually the name "Special Performance" was used instead.

747-300
image:pia.b747.arp.750pix.jpg thumb|right|250px|[[Pakistan International (PIA) Boeing 747-300 landing at London Heathrow Airport.]] The first incarnation of the 747-300 would have been a trijet version of the 747SP, intended to compete with the McDonnell Douglas DC-10 DC-10 and Lockheed L-1011 L-1011 TriStar. This plan was scrapped due to insufficient demand. The '''747-300''' name was revived for a new aircraft, which was introduced in 1980, and was the first 747 model to feature a "stretched upper deck," which increased its capacity over earlier models. Combi ('''747-300M''') and short range ('''747-300SR''') models (mainly for Japanese domestic routes) were also built. The upper deck was now accessed via a straight staircase, rather than the spiral steps that featured in the 100 and 200. The maximum range of a 747-300 is 7,700 miles (12,400 km). Airlines currently operating a large number of this type are JAL/JALways, Air India, Saudi Arabian Airlines, Pakistan International Airlines (PIA), Qantas, and Thai Airways.
- Seat diagrams for 747-338 subvariant

747-400
Image:britaw.b747-400.g-bnlo.arp.jpg thumb|right|250px|British Airways Boeing 747-400 landing at [[London Heathrow Airport.]]{{main|Boeing 747-400}} The '''747-400''' is the latest completed model of the 747, and also the only series currently in production. It added 6ft(2m) wing tip extensions and 6ft(2m) winglets, an all-new glass cockpit which dispensed with the need for a flight engineer, tail fuel tanks, revised engines, an all-new interior, and newer in-flight entertainment to the basic design of the -300 series. It first entered service in 1989 with Northwest Airlines. China Airlines was the first airline to take the new "Signature Interior" with the China Airlines/Boeing livery 747-400, the aircraft entering service in 2005. The 747-400 is about 25 percent more fuel efficient than the 747-100, and twice as quiet. It is available in all passenger, combi ('''747-400M''') and freighter ('''747-400F''' and '''747-400SF''') variants. Until the Airbus A380 officially enters service, the Japanese domestic variant, the 747-400D, is potentially the highest-capacity passenger aircraft in the world: ANA used to operate a few of its 747-400Ds in an all-economy 594-seat configuration. However, since the two Japanese operators JAL and ANA have fitted the aircraft with bigger business class areas, the highest number of seats at the moment on a passenger airplane is 587 on 747-400 aircraft operated by the France French airline Corsair (airline) Corsair. The -400D lacks the wing tip extensions and winglets included on other variants, allowing for increased number of takeoffs and landings by lowering wing stresses. The -400D can be converted to the long range version when needed. The US military designation for 747-400 is Boeing C-33 C-33, intended to augment the C-17 Globemaster III C-17 fleet, but the plan was cancelled in favor of purchasing additional C-17 military transports. The '''747-400ER''' is 400's extended range version: it also comes in an all-freight version, the '''747-400ERF'''.
- Seat diagrams for 747-400

747 Large Cargo Freighter
Image:Boeing 747-400LCF 2.jpg thumb|right|250px|Large Cargo Freighter Boeing announced in October 2003 that due to the high cost of marine transport marine shipping, air transport will be the primary method of transporting parts for the Boeing 787 787. Passenger 747-400 aircraft are to be converted into an outsize configuration, in order to ferry sub-assemblies to Everett, Washington Everett, Washington for final assembly. It has a bulging fuselage like the Aero Spacelines Super Guppy Super Guppy or Airbus Beluga cargo planes used for transporting wings and fuselage sections. The conversion, designed by Boeing´s Moscow office, is to be carried out in Taiwan by a subsidiary of the Evergreen Group. Boeing has purchased two former China Airlines aircraft which are currently being modified and a third aircraft, yet to be acquired, will be added later. Delivery times for the wings — built in Japan — will be reduced from around 30 days to one day with the 747 LCF. The Large Cargo Freighter can hold three times the volume of a 747-400F freighter. (See: Boeing news releases [http://www.boeing.com/news/releases/2003/q4/nr_031013g.html], [http://www.boeing.com/news/releases/2005/q1/nr_050222g.html], [http://www.boeing.com/news/releases/2005/q1/nr_050218g.html]). Evergreen International Airlines, which is unrelated to the Evergreen Group, will be the operator of the LCF fleet. [http://www.evergreenairlines.com/p_releases/121505.html]

747-8
{{main|Boeing 747-8}} Image:Boeing 747-8I Large.jpg thumb|350px|right|Compared to previous 747s, the 747-8 Intercontinental is “stretched� in two bands for a total extension of 11.7 feet. Boeing announced a new 747 model, the '''747-8''' (referred to as the '''747 Advanced''' prior to launch) on November 14 2005, which will use same engine and cockpit technology as the Boeing 787 787 (They decided to call it the 747-8 because of the technology it will share with the 787, also called ''Dreamliner''). Boeing claims that the new design will be quieter, more economical and more environmentally friendly. The passenger version (dubbed '''747-8 Intercontinental''') will be capable of carrying up to 450 passengers in a 3-class configuration and fly over 8,000 nautical miles (14,816 km) at 0.86 Mach number Mach. As a derivative of the already common 747-400, the 747-8 has the economic benefit of similar training and interchangeable parts. According to [http://quote.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=conews&tkr=BA:US Bloomberg], Boeing is staking its position as the dominant maker of the biggest passenger planes on selling Pakistan International Airlines Corp. and other Asian carriers the first of a longer, more fuel-efficient version of its 747-8 model.

Government and military
The current President of the United States U.S. presidential aircraft, VC-25A, is among the most famous 747 models. It is popularly known as ''Air Force One'', although that name technically refers to any United States Air Force aircraft carrying the President. VC-25A is based on the civilian 747-200, though it contains many of the innovations introduced on the 747-400 (such as an updated flight deck and engines.) Other special 747s include the E-4B National Emergency Airborne Command Post (referred to colloquially as "Kneecap"), modified 747s to transport the Space Shuttle (Shuttle Carrier Aircraft), and aerial refueling Tanker (aircraft) tankers. A recent addition to the military's 747 arsenal is the experimental Airborne Laser, a component of the National Missile Defense plan. T/Space is also planning to use a 747 for its CXV space capsule proposal. A number of other governments also use the 747 as a VIP transport, including Bahrain, Iran, Japan, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Taiwan, United Arab Emirates, and Brunei.

Powerplants
(For the last versions of each series offered) *'''747-100''' **four Pratt & Whitney JT9D Pratt & Whitney JT9D-7A turbofans *'''747-200/300''' **four Pratt & Whitney JT9D Pratt & Whitney JT9D-7R4G2 turbofans ''or'' **four Rolls-Royce RB211 Rolls-Royce RB211-524D4 turbofans ''or'' **four General Electric CF6-50E2 turbofans *'''747-400''' **four Pratt & Whitney PW4000 Pratt & Whitney PW4062 turbofans ''or'' **four Rolls-Royce RB211 Rolls-Royce RB211-524H turbofans ''or'' **four General Electric CF6 General Electric CF6-80C2B5F turbofans *'''747-8''' ** four General Electric GEnx turbofans

Technical data
{| |- bgcolor="#DDDDDD" !Measurement !747-100 (initial version) !747-400ER (current version) !747-8 Intercontinental[http://www.boeing.com/commercial/747family/747-8_fact_sheet.html] |- bgcolor="#EEEEEE" |Length || align="center" | 70.7 m || align="center" | 70.7 m || align="center" | 74.2 m |- bgcolor="#EEEEEE" |Span || align="center" | 59.6 m || align="center" | 64.4 m || align="center" | 68.5 m |- bgcolor="#EEEEEE" |Height || align="center" | 19.3 m || align="center" | 19.4 m || align="center" | 19.4 m |- bgcolor="#EEEEEE" |Wing area || align="center" | 511 m² || align="center" | 541 m² || align="center" | ? |- bgcolor="#EEEEEE" |Weight empty || align="center" | 162.4 t || align="center" | 180.8 t || align="center" | ? |- bgcolor="#EEEEEE" |Maximum take-off weight || align="center" | 340.2 t || align="center" | 412.8 t || align="center" | 435.4 t |- bgcolor="#EEEEEE" |Cruising speed || align="center" | .84 Mach|| align="center" | .855 Mach || align="center" | .855 Mach |- bgcolor="#EEEEEE" |Maximum speed || align="center" | .89 Mach || align="center" | .92 Mach || align="center" | .92 Mach |- bgcolor="#EEEEEE" |Range fully loaded   || align="center" | 9,040 km || align="center" | 14,200 km || align="center" | 14,815 km |- bgcolor="#EEEEEE" |Max. fuel capacity   || align="center" | 183,380 litres || align="center" | 241,140 litres || align="center" | 227,600 litres |- bgcolor="#EEEEEE" |Max. fuel/Range, fully loaded   || align="center" | 20.3 litres/km || align="center" | 17.0 litres/km || align="center" | 15.4 litres/km |- bgcolor="#EEEEEE" |Cargo capacity   || align="center" | 170.6 CBM (5 Unit Load Device pallets + 14 LD1s) || align="center" | 158.6 CBM (4 pallets + 14 LD1s) || align="center" | 275.6 CBM (8 Unit Load Device pallets + 16 LD1s) |- bgcolor="#EEEEEE" |Engines (example) || align="center" | 4 × Pratt & Whitney JT9D, 209 kN thrust each|| align="center" | 4 × General Electric CF6-80, 274 kN thrust each|| align="center" | 4 × General Electric GEnx-2B67, 296 kN thrust each |- bgcolor="#EEEEEE" |Cockpit Crew || align="center" | Three || align="center" | Two || align="center" | Two |}

Facts & trivia
Image:Giant Plane Comparison.png thumb|right|A size comparison between four of the largest aircraft. Click to enlarge. *A 747-400 has six million parts (half of which are fasteners) made in 33 different countries. *Just one engine on a 747 produces more thrust than all four engines on an early model Boeing 707 combined. *When pressurized, a 747 fuselage holds over a ton of air. *Early model 747s have more than 700lbs (300 kg) of depleted uranium molded into the engine nacelles. Its purpose is as ballast to prevent the wing from fluttering. *At the time of its launch, the term "jumbo jet" had already been coined by the media to describe a general class of new wide-bodied airliners then being developed, including the Lockheed L-1011 TriStar and Douglas DC-10. Boeing was quite keen to discourage the media and the public using the term "jumbo jet" for the 747, but their efforts were in vain, and now the term is synonymous with the 747. *Due to its immense length, there is a very small flexure of the fuselage in flight. This effect was not anticipated in the design of the autopilot on early models, and so there is a very slow oscillation in yaw when flying on autopilot. This was first discovered on an overseas flight to the Paris Airshow, when some of the people in the rear got air sick. Upon return, the plane went through a shake test for two weeks to sort out the problem and adjust the yaw damper system. This solved the problem and the effect is now too small to be noticeable by passengers. *To enable easy transportation of spare engines between sites by airlines, early 747s include the ability to attach a non functioning fifth-pod engine under the port wing of the aircraft, between the nearest functioning engine and the fuselage. Photographs of planes flying in this configuration are highly prized by aircraft enthusiasts. [http://www.airliners.net/open.file/783444/M/] [http://www.airliners.net/open.file/763404/M/][http://www.airliners.net/open.file/0289429/M/] *There are other aircraft with prominent humps on the upper fuselage including the Carvair, which was built from 1961 to 1969. Its most notable appearance is in the 1964 James Bond movie ''Goldfinger''. *In the 1970s 747 pilots nicknamed the Jumbo Jet, "The Queen of the Skies" because of its huge size and capacity. *Although the upper deck might seem small compared to the size of the whole aircraft, it can seat a significant number of people: JAL has 86 seats on the upper deck of its B747-400D aircraft. *The 747 is certified to fly on 3 of its 4 engines. A 747 can successfully take-off even if an engine fails after rotation, and in many cases the flight will continue to its destination.

Preserved aircraft
As increasing numbers of 'classic' 747-100 and 747-200 series are retired, some are finding their way into aircraft museums. They include: *Boeing 747-100 [http://registry.faa.gov/aircraftinquiry/NNumSQL.asp?NNumbertxt=7470&cmndfind.x=0&cmndfind.y=0 N7470], "City of Everett", the first 747 prototype Museum of Flight, Seattle, Washington Seattle, Washington, United States USA *KLM 747-200(SUD) PH-BUK "Louis Blériot" at National Aviation Theme Park Aviodrome, Lelystad, Netherlands *Qantas 747-200 VH-EBQ "City of Bunbury" at Qantas Founders Outback Museum, Longreach Airport, Longreach, Queensland Longreach, Queensland, Australia *South African Airways 747-200 ZS-SAN "Lebombo" and 747SP ZS-SPC "Maluti" at Rand Airport, Johannesburg, South Africa *Lufthansa 747-200 D-ABYM "Schleswig-Holstein" at Technik Museum Speyer, Speyer, Germany *Air France 747-100 F-BPVJ at Musée de l'Air et de l'Espace, Le Bourget airport, Paris, France *Iran Air 747SPs EP-IAA and EP-IAC and 747-200F EP-ICC at Tehran Aerospace Exhibition, Tehran, Iran

Disasters


Specific accidents
The 747 has been involved in a number of air disasters. However, very few have been due to design flaws in the aircraft itself: as with most air accidents, most have been because of human error, improper maintenance, or in a few cases, terrorism terrorist or military action. *Lufthansa flight 540, Nairobi, 1974 *Tenerife disaster, 1977 *Air-India flight 855, Arabian Sea, 1978 *Korean Air flight 007, Sea of Okhotsk, 1983 *Avianca flight 011, Madrid, 1983 *Air-India flight 182, Atlantic Ocean, 1985 *Japan Airlines Flight 123, Tokyo, 1985 *South African Airways flight 295, Indian Ocean, 1987 *Pan Am flight 103, Lockerbie, 1988 *United Airlines Flight 811. Honolulu, 1989 *China Airlines flight 358, Taiwan, 1991 *Bijlmermeer disaster El Al cargo flight 1862, Amsterdam 1992 *Philippine Airlines Flight 434, Okinawa, 1994 *TWA Flight 800, Long Island, 1996 *Saudia flight 763, Delhi, 1996 *Korean Air flight 801, Guam, 1997 *Singapore Airlines Flight 006, Taipei, 2000 *China Airlines flight 611, Penghu Islands, 2002

Accident summary
See [http://aviation-safety.net/database/type/type.php?type=104 Aviation Safety Network] for authoritative figures. *Hull-loss Accidents: [http://aviation-safety.net/database/dblist.php?field=typecode&var=104%&cat=%1&sorteer=datekey&page=1 33] with a total of 2850 fatalities *Other hull-loss occurrences: 6 with a total of 857 fatalities *Hijackings: 30 with a total of 22 fatalities

External links

- Two Boeing 747 collided on Tenerife
- Boeing.com
- Boeing 747 e-brochure - Macromedia Flash Flash animation
- Airliners.net - Boeing 747-100 & 200
- Airliners.net - Boeing 747-300
- Airliners.net - Boeing 747-400
- Airliners.net 747 images
- Boeing 747SP Website
- Calipso: Boeing 747 Information & History
- Aircraft-Info.net - Boeing 747-400
- Planemad.net - Boeing 747 Production Lists
- Boeing 747 Family - 747 Classics (100, 200 and 300)
- Boeing 747-400ER
- Boeing 747-200X, AirTransportBiz, Alain Mengus, October 2002
- Douglas' reaction to the B747

Related content
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[The article Boeing 747 is based on the the dictionary Wikipedia, the free encyklopedia. There you will find a list of all editors and the possibility to edit the original text of the article Boeing 747.
The texts from Wikipedia and this site follow the GNU Free Documentation License.]

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