After 53 years and more than 1,570 planes, the last Boeing 747 rolled off the assembly line in Washington state Tuesday evening, on its way to serve as a cargo plane.
The once-groundbreaking jumbo jet, with the distinctive second-floor bulge, is perhaps the most notable and popular plane Boeing has ever built. It was even big enough to be used to ferry the Space Shuttle from landing strips in California to its launch site in Florida. And it is set to launch a new type of spacecraft by Virgin Orbit as soon as next week, after carrying it aloft under its wing.
The 747 was once the choice of the rich and glamorous, and even royalty
Re: Last 747 rolls out of Boeing - 12/08/2207:20 PM
I've flown in one at least twice that I can remember, and it was pretty comfortable, even in coach. I flew it to and from Japan, so it was a long flight, and nice to have the space.
Large airliners seem to be losing appeal these days, where efficiency and smaller airport access are becoming more important. Per passenger, the larger planes are probably pretty efficient, but you need to have a lot of people going to the same place, and an airport that can handle it. I think now, it's more efficient to just fly directly to the smaller airports than using a hub method.
Re: Last 747 rolls out of Boeing - 12/08/2207:56 PM
I did Chicago to Tokyo in one and I don't think I could have stayed sane in any other commercial aircraft on a flight that long. Even the cheap seats had legroom.
Re: Last 747 rolls out of Boeing - 02/02/2310:44 AM
I have a couple of friends who fly the 747-400, and they love it. Certainly a real pilot’s airplane, that flies very well for its size. Always nice to see them being thrown around, such as here, on the old checkerboard approach into Kai Tak: