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Boeing 707

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Boeing 707/720
Boeing 707:Boac.707.arp.750pix
BOAC 707 at London Heathrow Airport in 1964
Type Airliner
Manufacturer Boeing Airplane Company
Maiden flight December 20, 1957
Introduced October 1958 with Pan American
Produced 1958-1991
Number built 1,010
Developed from Boeing 367-80
Variants C-137 Stratoliner
VC-137 (Air Force One)
Boeing 707:View of the port (left) number 1 & 2 Pratt & Whitney JT3D jet engines of a British Caledonian Boeing 707 showing the peculiarity of the number 1 engine mount which is different from the other three. June 1975.
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View of the port (left) number 1 & 2 Pratt & Whitney JT3D jet engines of a British Caledonian Boeing 707 showing the peculiarity of the number 1 engine mount which is different from the other three. June 1975.

The Boeing 707 (most commonly spoken as "Seven Oh Seven") was a four engined commercial passenger jet airliner developed by Boeing in the early 1950s. Although it was not the first commercial jet in service (that distinction belongs to the De Havilland Comet), it was the first to be commercially successful, and is credited as ushering in the Jet Age, as well as being the first of Boeing's 7x7 series of airliners. Boeing delivered a total of 1,010 Boeing 707s. As of October 2006, 68 Boeing 707 aircraft (of any variant) were reported to be remaining in airline service.[1]


Contents

History

The 707 was based on an aircraft known as the 367-80. The "Dash 80", as it was called within Boeing, took less than two years from project launch in 1952 to rollout on May 14, 1954. The prototype was the basis for both the KC-135 Stratotanker, an air tanker used by the United States Air Force, and the 707. This was powered by the Pratt & Whitney JT3C engine which was the civilian version of the J57 used on the many military aircraft of the day including the F-100, F-101, F-102, and the B-52. A late and costly decision was to widen the fuselage by 6 inches (150 mm) compared to the original 367-80 and KC-135 so as to be a little wider than the Douglas DC-8.

At Seafair on August 6, 1955, Boeing test pilot Alvin "Tex" Johnston performed a barrel roll in the Dash-80 at 500 feet. This story appears on a video called 'Frontiers of Flight - The Jet Airliner', produced by the National Air and Space Museum in association with the Smithsonian Institution in 1992. The roll can be viewed on video at AviationExplorer.com. To date Johnston is the only pilot to have performed this in a four engine jet transport. (Other big four engine jet aircraft have done barrel rolls; for instance, the Avro Vulcan XA890 was rolled by Roly Falk on the first day of the 1955 Farnborough Air Show, but it was a bomber).

Pan Am was the first airline to operate the 707; the aircraft's first commercial flight was from New York to Paris on October 26, 1958. American Airlines operated the first transcontinental 707 flight on January 25, 1959. The 707 quickly became the most popular jetliner of its time, edging out its main competitor, the Douglas DC-8.

In order to become a new major player in the commercial airliner business, Boeing was quick to bend to customer's desires. While the 707-120 was the initial standard model with Pratt & Whitney JT3C engines, Qantas ordered a shorter body version called the 707-138 and Braniff ordered the higher-thrust version with Pratt & Whitney JT4A engines, the 707-220. The final major derivative was the 707-320 which featured an extended span and larger wing. The ultimate version was 707-420, a -320 equipped with Rolls-Royce Conway turbofan engines. Most of the later 707s featured the more fuel efficient and quieter JT3D turbofan engines and flaps on the leading edge of the wings to improve takeoff and landing performance. These were denoted with a "B" suffix such as 707-120B and 707-320B.

The 707's engines could not supply sufficient bleed air for pressurization without a serious loss of thrust, so the aircraft instead used engine-driven turbocompressors to supply high-pressure air for this purpose. On many commercial 707's the outer port (#1) engine mount is distinctly different from the other three, as this is the only engine not fitted with a turbocompressor. The Boeing 707 was the first commercially successful airplane to use podded engines.

As the 1960s drew to a close, the exponential growth in air travel led to the 707 being a victim of its own success. The 707 was now too small to handle the increased passenger densities on the routes for which it was designed. Stretching the fuselage was not a viable option because the installation of larger, more powerful engines would in turn need a larger undercarriage, which was not feasible given the design's limited ground clearance. Boeing's answer to the problem was the first twin aisle airliner - the 747. The 707's first-generation engine technology was also rapidly becoming obsolete in the areas of noise and fuel economy.

The 707 wings are swept back at 35 degrees and, like all swept-wing aircraft, displayed an undesirable "Dutch roll" flying characteristic which manifested itself as an alternating yawing and rolling motion. Boeing already had considerable experience with this on the B-47 and B-52, and had developed the yaw damper system on the B-47, that lent itself to later swept wing configurations like the 707. However many new 707 pilots had no experience with this phenomenon as they were transitioning from straight-wing propeller driven aircraft such as the Douglas DC-7 and Lockheed Constellation. On one customer acceptance flight, where the yaw damper was turned off to familiarize the new pilots with flying techniques, a trainee pilot exacerbated the Dutch Roll motion causing a violent roll motion which tore two of the four engines off the wing. The plane, a brand new 707-227 N7071 destined for Braniff, crash landed on a river bed north of Seattle at Arlington, Washington, killing four of the eight occupants.[1] In his autobiography, Tex Johnston described a Dutch Roll incident he experienced as a passenger on an early commercial 707 flight. As the aircraft's movements gradually became more severe, he went to the cockpit and found the crew frantically attempting to resolve the situation. He introduced himself and relieved the ashen-faced captain who immediately left the cockpit feeling ill. Johnston quickly stabilised the plane and later, even landed it for the crew.

Production of the passenger 707 ended in 1978. In total, 1,010 707s were built for civil use, though many of these found their way to military service. The purpose-built military variants remained in production until 1991.

Traces of the 707 are still found in the 737, which uses a modified version of the 707's fuselage, as well as essentially the same external nose and cockpit configuration as the 707. These were also used on the previous Boeing 727, while the Boeing 757 also used the 707 fuselage cross-section.

Variants

Boeing 707:British Caledonian Boeing 707 shown at Prestwick International Airport, South Ayrshire, Scotland, circa 1972.
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British Caledonian Boeing 707 shown at Prestwick International Airport, South Ayrshire, Scotland, circa 1972.
Boeing 707: RAAF 707-368C at RAF Fairford, Gloucestershire, England
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RAAF 707-368C at RAF Fairford, Gloucestershire, England

Operators

Although 707s are no longer employed by major US airlines, many can still be found in service with smaller non-US airlines, charter services and air cargo operations. Use of 707s on US cargo routes has declined in recent years because the now-obsolescent engines used on many 707s remaining in service are far too loud to meet noise restrictions at many US civil airports.

In the 1980s, the USAF acquired around 250 used 707s to provide parts for the KC-135E Stratotanker program.[2] This is the major reason so few 707s are in service compared with Douglas DC-8s.

Current operators (as of August 2006) of the Boeing 707 include: African Airlines International (4), Angola Air Charter (3), Hewa Bora Airways (3), Libyan Arab Airlines (4), Iran Air (5), Sky Aviation (3), BETA Cargo (4), Saha Airlines (4) and Skymaster Airlines (5). Some 21 other airlines operate smaller numbers of the type.[1]

The current list of customer codes used by Boeing to identify specific options and trim specified by customers was started with the 707, and has been maintained through Boeing's current models. Essentially the same system as used on the earlier Boeing 377, the code consisted of two digits affixed to the model number to identify the specific aircraft version. For example, Eastern Airlines was assigned code '25'. Thus a 707-200B sold to Eastern would carry the model number 707-225B. The number remained constant as further Boeings were purchased, thus an Eastern 737-300 would carry the number 737-325.

The Chinese government sponsored development of the Shanghai Y-10 during the 1970s, which was a near carbon-copy of the 707.

Specifications

707-120B 707-320B
Passengers
(2 class)
110 147
Passengers
(1 class)
179 202
Max. takeoff weight 257,000 lb (116,570 kg) 333,600 lb (151,320 kg)
Empty weight 122,533 lb (55,580 kg) 146,400 lb (66,406 kg)
Operating range (Max Payload) 3,680 nautical miles (6,820 km) 3,735 nautical miles (6,920 km)
Cruising speed 540 kt (1000 km/h)525 kt (972 km/h)
Length 144 ft 6 in (44.07 m) 152 ft 11 in (46.61 m)
Wingspan 130 ft 10 in (39.90 m)145 ft 9 in (44.42 m)
Tail height 42 ft 5 in (12.93 m)
Powerplants Four 75.6 kN (17,000 lbf) Pratt & Whitney JT3D-1 turbofans.Four 80 kN (18,000 lbf) JT3D-3s or four 84.4 kN (19,000 lbf) JT3D-7s.

Deliveries

 1994  1993  1992  1991  1990  1989  1988  1987  1986  1985  1984  1983  1982 
10514450943888
 1981  1980  1979  1978  1977  1976  1975  1974  1973  1972  1971  1970  1969 
2361389721114101959
 1968  1967  1966  1965  1964  1963  1962  1961  1960  1959  1958  1957  1956 
1111188361383468809177800

Incidents

Trivia

See also: List of Boeing 707 operators and Airport (film)

References

  1. ^ a b Flight International, 3-9 October 2006

Related development<h3>

<h3>Comparable aircraft<h3><h3>Designation sequence<h3><h3>Related lists<h3>

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U.S. airliners 1950-1959 | 1957 introductions | Boeing aircraft | Jet aircraft

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