Douglas DC-7, 1956. Creator: Douglas Aircraft Company.

Douglas DC-7, 1956. Creator: Douglas Aircraft Company.

2-839-612 - Heritage Art/Heritage Images

Forward fuselage only. Douglas DC-7;The Douglas DC-7 was an advanced development of the;DC-6B piston-engine airliner. It was introduced by American Airlines on its New York–Los Angeles route in November 1953 and was the first airliner to provide nonstop transcontinental service in both directions. The fastest transport aircraft in service, the DC-7 cruised at 580 kilometers (360 miles) per hour. A total of 338 DC-7s of all types were purchased by 18 different airlines. Like other piston-engine airliners, it was made obsolete by the introduction of turbine-engine Boeing 707s and Douglas;DC-8s. Some DC-7s later served as cargo and charter planes. This nose section is from American Airlines’ Flagship Vermont, which carried about 130,000 passengers in its nearly 13,500 hours aloft. Gift of American Airlines;Wingspan:35.8 m (117 ft 6 in);Length:33.2 m (108 ft 11 in);Height:8.7 m (28 ft 7 in);Weight, gross:55,429 kg (122,200 lb);Weight, empty:30,076 kg (66,305 lb);Top speed:656 km/h (410 mph);Engine:4 Wright R-3350 Turbo Compound, 3,250 hp;Manufacturer:Douglas Aircraft Co., Santa Monica, Calif., 1956


Image Details


People Information

Creator
  1. Douglas Aircraft Company, attributed to: American: Aerospace manufacturer

Medium
  1. Overall: aluminum

Picture Type
  1. Craft-aircraft
  2. Object

Category Hierarchy

Lifestyle & Leisure Transport & Travel

Science & Nature Technology & Innovation


Digital Image Size

Pixel Dimensions (W x H) : 8688x5792
File Size : 147,425kb


Aliases

  1. A19660149000
  1. NASM-A19660149000-NASM2018-10595.txt
  1. 0990010196
  1. 2-839-612
  1. 2839612
  1. A19660149000

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