Is it the end of the line for the 747?

The iconic plane that embodied the word jumbo story is finally coming to its dusky days. SAD. Boeing should make the 747 great again.


http://www.wbur.org/hereandnow/2017/01/25/united-delta-boeing-747-retires
We’ve already lost the beautiful Concorde to excessive cost and tragedy, but now another one of world’s most iconic airline designs is due to follow.

The Boeing 747, an icon that harkens back to another time of flying (think the Pan Am glory days), is set to fade away.

Cathay Pacific flew their last 747 flight back in October, and United and Delta are phasing the aircraft out this year. I flew on one of the final Cathay flights, and the magic of ascending upstairs into the bubble for one of the last times will be a fond part of my traveling memories.

Patrick Smith, in his Ask the Pilot column astutely calls the jet the Empire State Building of jetliners: “It’s no longer the biggest or the flashiest, but its still the grandest and most historically significant.”

The 747 was the first to plane to allow long-distance travel with with a large amount of passengers, and not all of them rich ones. It took international travel from the realm of the well-to-do into the middle class. That alone is quite a significant achievement in terms of lives changed and borders made smaller.

But the real appeal for many is the aesthetics. With a signature bubble on the top, the plane also is a joy to watch on final approach, with an element of grace that you don’t see from other aircraft models. It has a strange, organic feeling for a large chunk of steel with wings.

In Mark Vanhoenacker’s beautiful book, Skyfaring, he dedicates a chapter to discuss why pilots find the plane so special. It comes down to this organic design: “Perhaps it recalls a natural relationship—that of the head of a bird, a swan perhaps, to a long body and wide wings. Joseph Sutter, the 747’s lead designer, was drawn to birds as a child—eagles, hawks, ospreys. He might be pleased to know that his achievement has come full circle, that a writer on the wildlife of Virginia has described the great blue heron as the ‘747 of the swamp.”

The iconic bubble, initially added allow for a cargo door to be fitted to the nose, started out being used as a First Class lounge in some of the golden days of jet travel. After the 1973 fuel crisis, most airlines — wait for it —added more seats, a trend that carries on today.

The industry has moved onto focus on more cost effective two-engine planes that can land at a wider variety of airports. Though some of the later models of the 747 will still be in the air, Boeing’s order book for the plane has dwindled and the plane is settling into the twilight of its storied career.

Same reason the A380 is doing badly and airbus may never recover the costs of research.

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http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-mat8fPwHcrI/T9A_43a9_PI/AAAAAAAAA-c/UNN8jJRd3Ks/s1600/1.jpg

https://i.ytimg.com/vi/845w8O4T9v8/maxresdefault.jpg

There is something about the Airbus that prevents me from loving it. I dont get that personal feel, sometmes its the video screen placed away for communal viewing rather than upclose and personal on the seat infront.

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https://www.kenyatalk.com/index.php?media/2016-02-01_paramaribo.1668/full&d=1486565718

Si thats the airline you fly, not the model of the plane. Its them who decide whether each seat will have a screen, legroom, seat width, e.t.c. Ni kama tu matatu, same make Isuzu NQR, zingine ziko na speakers tu, zingine screen moja hapo mbele, zingine screen nyuma ya kila kiti na ingine hapo mbele

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I have never encountered that in a boeing. Maybe fir Airbus thats an option/trimlevel they give clients. Pia the ambience kuna kitu missing

Worse is the A380 needs a big turning radius, a double deck air apron to embark and disembark passengers in the double deck plane at the same time. That meant 90% of the airport couldn’t accommodate it until they spend $ millions on upgrades.

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Never seen one. I saw a dreamliner the other day and that thing is huuuge…is a 747 bigger?

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The one I like the most ni Boeing 777 hii ni kama basi ya riakanau inabeba kubeba.Was very popular on the Kenya airways flights to west Africa coming from China/Dubai juu hakukuwa story ya left luggages!
Dreamliner is too lightweight (but fuel efficient) hence cannot carry as much.

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Did you know that the location of the 747 cockpit is higher and far back the nose than the a380 such that during landing if you don’t listen to altimeter callouts you can hit the runway hard because of late flare?

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but the latest model of 747 was introduced in 2010 and they expected it to run the market until 2020…a380 has pulled it down…

i believe the seats and the yoke are adjusted

I don’t like airbus’ joystick philosophy

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air France from brazil went down in the atlantic due to the co pilots pitch up ata bila yeye kujua…all people perished coz the pilot couldnt see co pilots mistake from his side until it was very late…yoke rules
Air France Flight 447 - Wikipedia

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They interior layout out varies from airline to airline. Maybe the guys you’ve flown with are mean on in flight.
Most airlines these days have screens on every seat apart from budget carriers, not all though.

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When you say dreamliner, you are referring to the Boeing 787, it has a beautiful interior though and is smaller than the Boeing 777 series. The dreamliner is tiny as compared to the 747.

B777 is the best for commercial use, especially if you have cargo and passengers. It can carry some major payload. Emirates even ditched their airbus 330 and 340 and have retained their 777 series.

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https://www.lufthansa-technik.com/image/image_gallery?uuid=89b57fa0-e6cb-49f8-ba22-794d04f48194&groupId=100446&t=1369589376324 Airbus 380