Re: OKC NBA Team to fly Northwest charters
Originally Posted by
zcamaro70
Thats not a 747..... someone else might know for sure but I think it is a MD-80 or varient of. Much cheaper than a double decker. It is probably much less of a headache for chartering than paying for upkeep/pilot/crew on a personally owned plane.
It's a 727.
747 is a jumbo-jet with an upper floor.
The 727 is the only tri-jet built by Boeing. The other two popular american tri-jets, McDonnell Douglas DC-10/MD-11 and Lockheed L-1011 Tristar, were competitors (hence answers) to the 747 jumbo-jet. All of these airliners have sense no longer been produced, primarily due to rising fuel costs of having 3 engines.
The DC-10/MD-11 fleet has mostly been converted into freighters and used by Fed Ex. The Trijet got a lot of bad press due to some significant air crashes - but in fact it was mostly due to bad maintenance practices (of American airlines in Tulsa, in particular). This caused the callapse of what otherwise was the most popular airplane (DC-10/MD-11, remember all of the aviation/airline magazines of the past, they had a pic of a trijet in most cases) and allowed Boeing to buy McDonnell Douglas, thereby putting an end to MD-11 production (I joined Boeing in 1998, right prior to the McDonnell Douglas takeover).
It's too bad, because otherwise the MD-11 in particular is a great jet and would be a wonderful competitor to the 777 and 747.
But, yeah - back to subject, the picture is a 727, single-aisle aircraft. It's noteworthy because it can take off from just about any airport regardless of runway length, due to its great thrust to weight ratio and its' revolutionary wing design (which provided much improved lift when the flaps were extended).
You used to see LOTS and I mean LOTS of airlines flying 727's, it was the most popular airliner until the later 1980's when 737's took over. Like I said, the 727's demise was its operating costs (3 jets and 3 pilots/senior officers).
Oklahoma City, the RENAISSANCE CITY!
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