Boeing 747

Gemini Sparkle

Key Takeaways:

  • The Boeing 747 is one of the most successful and largest aircraft ever built, having gone through half a dozen versions and selling over 1,500 units in its 50-year history.
  • Initially a revolutionary and democratizing jet, the 747 is known for its size, sophistication, and speed, cruising faster than Mach .85 despite its "jumbo jet" moniker.
  • While twin-engine jets now dominate passenger transport, the 747 remains in production, primarily as a freighter version, with the latest 747-8 passenger model typically carrying 467 passengers.
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5. Boeing 747
Photo by RAFAEL LUIZ CANOSSA, cC BY-SA 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons.

The first jumbo jet has gone through a half-dozen versions in its 50-year history. Boeing has turned out more than 1,500 of the enormous jets, which are one of the largest aircraft ever built and one of the most successful aircraft, period. The original 747 was a revelation—huge, fast, sophisticated and democratizing—and it has only continued to get better and better over its half-century-plus lifespan. The 747 remains in production, though Boeing is focusing on building freighter versions of it now, as twin-engine aircraft such as the Boeing 777 with huge turbofan engines rule the skies. Many think of the 747 as a lumbering giant—it’s anything but. With a cruise speed north of Mach .85, it’s one of the fastest commercial transport jets. The latest 747, the 747-8, typically carries 467 passengers.

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