Boeing 737 turns 50
Boeing's 737, the world's most common airliner, turned 50 over the
weekend: the single-aisle workhorse first took to the skies on April 9th,
1967.
The first versions of the plane were feeble by today's standards: the
737 100 "boasted" a range of just 1,150 miles (1,850km) and offering just 107
seats. Both of those features were, however, a little better than rival planes
of the time like the DC-9.
Also saving money was a design that pinched elements of Boeing's 707
and 727 while allowing the plane to operate with a flight crew of just two. The
first models were also easily adapted to fly people, cargo, or both. The design
also called for low maintenance so that the plane could be used to reach
destinations where ground support was minimal. Boeing even offered a "gravel
kit" to allow use of unpaved runways.
The plane was not a big hit in its early years: for four years in the
1970s Boeing shipped fewer than 30 planes. But it - pardon the pun - took off in
the 1980s as airline deregulation and rising middle class incomes increased
demand for air travel.
Early in the 1980s decade Boeing refreshed the plane, adding the
737-300, 737-400 and 737-500 to the range and adopting a distinctive
non-circular engine inlet. Range and capacity increased, as did fuel economy,
and the plane started selling a hundred or more units a year.
In the early 1990s another round of updates produced the "Next
Generation 737", complete with distinctive winglets, seat counts of 149 on the
model -600 and 700, 189 on the 737-800 and a whopping 220 seats and 5,400km
range for the top-of-the-range model 737-900ER. It's a versatile craft: your
correspondent has flow in them for 35-minute commuter hops, the
five-and-a-half-hour Sydney-to-Perth slog and on the three-and-a-half hour
Sydney-to-Auckland ride that shows off its 180-minute ETOPS rating.
The plane soon won a reputation for reliability and became a
favourite of low-cost airlines. The two paragons of that model, Southwest and
Ryanair, made a virtue of operating all-737 fleets, further accelerating demand
for air travel and for more 737s.
Boeing can therefore now deliver
737s at a rate of more than one a day and has unfilled orders
for more than 4,500 of the planes on its books.
Many of those orders are for the new "737MAX" variant, sporting the
X-wing - officially the "Advanced
Technology Winglet" - that will again reduce fuel consumption and noise. Boeing
will start shipping the new variant in May 2017 and they'll start to appear at
the world's airports not long afterwards.
Other orders are for the military variants of the 737 that see the
plane used for reconnaissance or cargo missions. There's also a "business jet"
variant for those who can afford their own plane.
All those variants have added up to 9,448 shipments, making it the
world's most popular airliner. It's also been involved in 168 accidents that have seen the aircraft
written off as a result, and over 3,000 fatalities. ®
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.