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Seating chart for American Airlines Flight 1420 created by the NTSB, revealing the location of passengers and lack of injury, severity of injuries, and deaths. The aircraft involved in the incident was a McDonnell Douglas MD-82 (registration N215AA [2]), a derivative of the McDonnell Douglas DC-9, and part of the McDonnell Douglas MD-80 series of aircraft.
American Airlines was the first US major carrier to order the MD-80 when it leased twenty 142-seat aircraft from McDonnell Douglas in October 1982 to replace its Boeing 727-100s. It committed to 67 firm orders plus 100 options in March 1984, and in 2002 its fleet peaked at more than 360 aircraft, 30% of the 1,191 produced.
McDonnell Douglas MD-83: 108 1987 One damaged as Flight 1572. One donated to George T. Baker Aviation School in 2010. One donated to Career Technology Center in 2019. Includes N984TW, the last McDonnell Douglas MD-80 ever built. McDonnell Douglas MD-87: 5 1999 2003 Unknown Former Reno Air fleet. [citation needed] McDonnell Douglas MD-90: 5 ...
Alaska Airlines: 13 35 48: Allegiant Air: 13 2 49 4 6 74: Alisarda: 7 7: Alitalia: 90 90: American Airlines: 8 270 108 5 391: Aserca Airlines: 5 6 11: Aurora Airlines: 4 4: Austral Lineas Aereas: 4 1 13 10 28: Austrian Airlines: 6 15 3 5 29: Avianca: 18 18: BlueSky Airlines 1 1: Bulgarian Air Charter: 9 9: BWIA West Indies Airways: 1 9 10 ...
The MD-90 was a stretched version of the MD-80, [48] powered by International Aero Engines V2500 turbofans, the largest rear-mounted engines ever used on a commercial jet. The MD-95 , a modern regional airliner closely resembling the DC-9-30, was the last McDonnell Douglas designed commercial jet to be produced.
On September 4, 2019, American Airlines retired its remaining McDonnell Douglas MD-80 aircraft to Roswell. [ 5 ] On May 23, 2024, the Reno Air Racing Association announced starting in 2025, the Roswell International Air Center will host the National Championship Air Races and Air Show starting in 2025, replacing the Reno Stead Airport .
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The McDonnell Douglas (later Boeing) MD-90 is an American five-abreast single-aisle airliner developed by McDonnell Douglas from its successful model MD-80. The airliner was produced by the developer company until 1997 and then by Boeing Commercial Airplanes. It was a stretched derivative of the MD-80 and thus part of the DC-9 family.