Big farewell to the jumbo jet as final 747 takes to the skies

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Big Farewell To The Jumbo Jet As Final 747 Takes To The Skies
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By Gene Johnson, Associated Press

Boeing bid farewell to an aviation legend when it delivered its last 747 jumbo jet.

Since its first flight in 1969, the giant yet graceful 747 has served as a cargo plane, a commercial aircraft capable of carrying nearly 500 passengers, a transport for NASA’s space shuttles, and the Air Force One presidential aircraft.

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It revolutionised travel, connecting international cities that had never before had direct routes and helping democratise passenger flight.

But over the past 15 years, Boeing and its European rival Airbus have introduced more profitable and fuel efficient wide-body planes, with only two engines to maintain instead of the 747′s four.

The final plane is the 1,574th built by Boeing in the Puget Sound region of Washington state.

“If you love this business, you’ve been dreading this moment,” said longtime aviation analyst Richard Aboulafia.

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“Nobody wants a four-engine airliner anymore, but that doesn’t erase the tremendous contribution the aircraft made to the development of the industry or its remarkable legacy.”


Military personnel watch as Air Force One, with President Donald Trump aboard, prepares to depart at Andrews Air Force Base (Andrew Harnik/AP)

Boeing set out to build the 747 after losing a contract for a huge military transport, the C-5A.

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The idea was to take advantage of the new engines developed for the transport – high-bypass turbofan engines, which burned less fuel by passing air around the engine core, enabling a longer flight range – and to use them for a newly imagined civilian aircraft.

It took more than 50,000 Boeing workers less than 16 months to churn out the first 747 – a Herculean effort that earned them the nickname, “The Incredibles”.

The jumbo jet’s production required the construction of a massive factory in Everett, north of Seattle – the world’s largest building by volume.

Among those in attendance on Tuesday was Desi Evans, 92, who joined Boeing at its factory in Renton, south of Seattle, in 1957 and went on to spend 38 years at the company before retiring.

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One day in 1967, his boss told him he’d be joining the 747 program in Everett – the next morning.

“They told me, ‘wear rubber boots, a hard hat and dress warm, because it’s a sea of mud.'” Mr Evans recalled. “And it was – they were getting ready for the erection of the factory.”

He was assigned as a supervisor to help discover how the interior of the passenger cabin would be installed and later oversaw crews that worked on sealing and painting the planes.


The crew of a Boeing 747 Jumbo Jet pose in front of the nose of the plane at  Heathrow Airport in, 1970  (AP)

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“When that very first 747 rolled out, it was an incredible time,” he said as he stood before the last plane, parked outside the factory.

“You felt elated – like you’re making history. You’re part of something big, and it’s still big, even if this is the last one.”

The plane’s fuselage was 225 feet (68.5 metres) long and the tail stood as tall as a six-story building.

The plane’s design included a second deck extending from the cockpit back over the first third of the plane, giving it a distinctive hump and inspiring a nickname, the Whale. More romantically, the 747 became known as the Queen of the Skies.

Some airlines turned the second deck into a first-class cocktail lounge, while even the lower deck sometimes featured lounges or even a piano bar.

One decommissioned 747, originally built for Singapore Airlines in 1976, has been converted into a 33-room hotel near the airport in Stockholm.

“It was the first big carrier, the first widebody, so it set a new standard for airlines to figure out what to do with it, and how to fill it,” said Guillaume de Syon, a history professor at Pennsylvania’s Albright College who specializes in aviation and mobility.


A Boeing 747 takes off from Seattle in January 1970 (AP)

“It became the essence of mass air travel: You couldn’t fill it with people paying full price, so you need to lower prices to get people onboard. It contributed to what happened in the late 1970s with the deregulation of air travel.”

The first 747 entered service in 1970 on Pan Am’s New York-London route, and its timing was terrible, Mr Aboulafia said.

It debuted shortly before the oil crisis of 1973, amid a recession that saw Boeing’s employment fall from 100,800 employees in 1967 to a low of 38,690 in April 1971.

An updated model — the 747-400 series — arrived in the late 1980s and had much better timing, coinciding with the Asian economic boom of the early 1990s, Mr Aboulafia said. He recalled taking a Cathay Pacific 747 from Los Angeles to Hong Kong as a twentysomething backpacker in 1991.

“Even people like me could go see Asia,” Mr Aboulafia said. “Before, you had to stop for fuel in Alaska or Hawaii and it cost a lot more. This was a straight shot — and reasonably priced.”

Delta was the last US airline to use the 747 for passenger flights, which ended in 2017, although some other international carriers continue to fly it, including the German airline Lufthansa.

Atlas Air ordered four 747-8 freighters early last year, with the final one leaving the factory Tuesday.

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