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When Northwest merged with Delta in 2009, N661US became Delta Ship 6301 and continued passenger operations for Delta until it was retired on September 9, 2015, making its final flight from Daniel K. Inouye International Airport in Honolulu to Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International Airport, [7] having logged more than 61 million miles (98 ...
Delta Ship 6301 (N661US), the first production 747-400, at the museum. This photograph was taken prior to the construction of the 747 Experience. N661US when it was in service with Northwest Airlines. The most significant aircraft in the outdoor collection is Delta Ship 6301 (N661US), the first production Boeing 747-400.
The incident aircraft, seen at Narita International Airport, on 8 November 2009, while wearing the Delta Air Lines livery and still in operation with Northwest, during the Delta Air Lines-Northwest Airlines merger. N661US's final arrival at Delta Flight Museum, Aug 20, 2016 "747 Experience" Opening event at Delta Flight Museum, March 28, 2017. [8]
The terminal featured the Panorama Room, a dining room with a view of the entire concourse, and the Clipper Hall museum of Pan Am history. In 1971, the terminal was expanded to accommodate the large Boeing 747 and renamed the "Pan Am Worldport". Worldport was the world's largest airline terminal and held the title for several years. [citation ...
Delta Air Lines aircraft parked on a taxiway at Kansas City International Airport. As of December 2024, the Delta Air Lines fleet consists of 986 mainline aircraft, making it one of the two largest commercial airline fleets in the world, along with United Airlines. [1] [2] [3] Delta Air Lines operates a fleet manufactured by Airbus and Boeing. [4]
Before 1981, the Delta corporate campus, an 80-acre (32 ha) plot of land in proximity to the old Hartsfield Airport terminal, was outside the City of Atlanta limits in unincorporated Fulton County. On August 3, 1981, the Atlanta City Council approved the annexation of 141 acres (57 ha) of land, an area containing the Delta headquarters. As of ...
In the early 1990s, Delta Air Lines invested over $500 million to develop the current terminal facility (known then as Terminal 3) in Cincinnati to support their hub operation, which at its peak was Delta's second-largest hub. [2] In September 1991, Delta announced that a people mover system would be installed to connect the new terminal and ...
A DC-3 with Wright Cyclone engines, built in 1938 for Australian National Airways. The List of original Douglas DC-3 operators lists only the original customers who purchased new aircraft.