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Boeing 747-100: 9 1970 1985 McDonnell Douglas DC-10: Boeing 747-200C: 1 1984 1984 None Leased from World Airways. [citation needed] Boeing 747SP: 2 1986 1992 McDonnell Douglas MD-11 [citation needed] Boeing 757-200: 177 1989 2020 Airbus A321-200 Airbus A321neo Airbus A321XLR: Retired early due to the COVID-19 pandemic. One crashed as Flight 965.
Air travel these days feels more like a necessary chore than a luxury, and that becomes clearer with each flight. The seats are cramped, legroom is scarce, the drink cart makes a single appearance ...
747-100SR September 26, 1973 Japan Airlines: April 2, 1975 Japan Airlines: 7 747-100BSR December 21, 1978 All Nippon Airways: November 12, 1982 All Nippon Airways: 20 747-100B August 2, 1979 Iran Air: April 2, 1982 Saudi Arabian Airlines: 9 747-100B SUD March 24, 1986 Japan Airlines: September 9, 1986 Japan Airlines: 2 Total 747-100 Series: 205 ...
Boeing 747-100: 5 1970 1977 [58] Lockheed L-1011 TriStar: Early retirement accelerated due to the 1970s energy crisis. Boeing 747-400: 16 2008 2018 Airbus A350-900: Former Northwest Airlines fleet. Last major passenger 747 operator in North America. [59] N661US ship 6301, the first 747-400 is displayed at the Delta Flight Museum. Boeing 767-200 ...
Former Continental Airlines fleet. Boeing 747-100: 23 1970 1999 Boeing 747-400 Boeing 777-200ER: One was damaged as Flight 811, but was later repaired and re-registered as N4724U. Another was damaged as Flight 826. Boeing 747-200B: 10 1987 2000 Boeing 747SP: 11 1985 1995 Boeing 747-400 Boeing 767-300ER Boeing 777-200: Former Pan Am fleet ...
Boeing 747-200M: 7 1975 1986 Boeing 747-200B/SUD: 3 1985 2003 Boeing 747-200/SUD/SF: 2 1998 2003 Converted from two Boeing 747-200M/SUD aircraft. Boeing 747-200M/SUD: 7 1985 2003 PH-BUK preserved at Lelystad Aerodrome in 2004. Boeing 747-300M: 3 1983 2003 Largest operator of its type along with Swissair and Singapore Airlines. Boeing 747-400: 5 ...
Some airlines omit the row number 13, reputedly because of a widespread superstition that the number is unlucky. This is the case with Lufthansa, for example (as shown on the Lufthansa A321/100 seating plan). Emirates used to have a row 13, but on their latest A380 aircraft have removed it (as shown on Emirates A380-800 seating plan).
This aircraft is now on public view in the car park outside the Flight Training Center of Cathay City. [23] Cathay Pacific was at one time the largest operator of the Lockheed L-1011 outside of the United States, with a fleet of 19 (Delta Air Lines in the U.S. was the largest, with 71), before being replaced by the Airbus A330-342s in 1996.