December 27, 2024

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The last 747 jumbo is about to roll off the Boeing assembly line

The last 747 jumbo is about to roll off the Boeing assembly line


New York
CNN Business

After 53 years and more than 1,570 aircraft, the last Boeing 747 is set to roll off the assembly line in Washington state Tuesday, on its way to serve as a freighter.

The once-pioneering giant plane, with its distinctive bulge on the second floor, is perhaps the most iconic and popular plane Boeing has ever built. It was even large enough to be used to transport the space shuttle from the landing strips in California to the launch site in Florida. A new type of file is due to be launched The spacecraft is by Virgin Galactic As soon as next week, having carried him aloft under her wing.

Boeing 747 in 1969. (Photo: Bernard Crochet Collection/Photo12/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

The 747 was once the choice of the glamorous rich and even royalty. Several movies, including the 1973 James Bond classic “Live and Let Die,” have featured on board, or sets made to look like the first-class lounge on the upper deck. The 747 is still operating as Air Force One, and two already-assembled aircraft are now in the works to be converted into the next generation of Air Force One. These aircraft will not be delivered for at least four years due to delays.

Other than that use, the 747’s days as a passenger airliner are almost entirely behind them. Airlines are moving away from fuel-guzzling four-engine planes like the 747. Airbus’s Rival

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A jumbo biplane was shot downthe A380, in 2019.

Boeing indicated in 2020 that it would stop building the 747, even in the form of its freighters, as customers either bought the more fuel-efficient 777 freighter or saved money by refurbishing previous 747 passenger planes for freight. It has not yet announced plans for the plant in Everett, Washington, It has 747 built, but it expects to keep it open.

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Boeing hasn’t built a passenger version of the plane since it last delivered the plane to Korean Air in 2017. The last Boeing 747 will go to Atlas Air Worldwide Holdings.

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which will operate the aircraft for the Swiss logistics company Kuehne + Nagel. The final aircraft will be moved on Tuesday to another shop at Boeing’s facility for paint and other final details, before it is delivered to Atlas early next year.

Today, only 44 passenger versions of the 747 remain in service, according to flight analytics firm Cirium. More than half of those – 25 – travel by air Lufthansa.

That total is down from more than 130 in service as passenger aircraft at the end of 2019, before the pandemic crippled demand for air travel, especially on international routes on which the 747 and other wide-body aircraft were primarily used. Most passenger versions of the planes were grounded during the early months of the pandemic and never returned to service.

But there are still 314,747 freighters in use, according to Cirium, many of which were initially used as passenger planes before being refurbished and converted into freighters.

UPS said in 2020, when Boeing indicated it would Soon it stops building jet plane. “With a maximum payload of 307,000 pounds, we use them on long, high-volume routes connecting Asia, North America, Europe, and the Middle East.”

Boeing delivered its first 747 in December 1969 to two airlines that no longer existed – TWA and Pan Am. Delta Airlines

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It was the last US airline to fly a passenger version of the plane, also in 2017. This past year was the last US 747 passenger flight – by both Delta and United

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It attracted large crowds of plane enthusiasts, a testament to its enduring popularity.

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CNN’s Jackie Wattles contributed to this report