Oroville Mercury-Register

Boeing bids farewell to an icon, delivers last 747 jumbo jet

- By Gene Johnson

Boeing bid farewell to an icon on Tuesday, delivering its final 747 jumbo jet as thousands of workers who helped build the planes over the past 55 years looked on.

Since its first flight in 1969, the giant yet graceful 747 has served as a cargo plane, a commercial aircraft capable of carrying nearly 500 passengers, a transport for NASA’s space shuttles, and the Air Force One presidenti­al aircraft. It revolution­ized travel, connecting internatio­nal cities that had never before had direct routes and helping democratiz­e passenger flight.

But over about the past 15 years, Boeing and its European rival Airbus have introduced more profitable and fuel efficient wide-body planes, with only two engines to maintain instead of the 747 s four. The final plane is the 1,574th built by Boeing in the Puget Sound region of Washington state.

Thousands of workers joined Boeing and other industry executives from around the world — as well as actor and pilot John Travolta, who has flown 747s — Tuesday for a ceremony in the company’s massive factory north of Seattle, marking the delivery of the last one to cargo carrier Atlas Air.

“If you love this business, you’ve been dreading this moment,” said longtime aviation analyst Richard Aboulafia. “Nobody wants a four-engine airliner anymore, but that doesn’t erase the tremendous contributi­on the aircraft made to the developmen­t of the industry or its remarkable legacy.”

Boeing set out to build the 747 after losing a contract for a huge military transport, the C-5A. The idea was to take advantage of the new engines developed for the transport — high-bypass turbofan engines, which burned less fuel by passing air around the engine core, enabling a farther flight range — and to use them for a newly imagined civilian

Boeing set out to build the 747 after losing a contract for a huge military transport, the C-5A.

aircraft.

It took more than 50,000 Boeing workers less than 16 months to churn out the first 747 — a Herculean effort that earned them the nickname “The Incredible­s.” The jumbo jet’s production required the constructi­on of a massive factory in Everett, north of Seattle — the world’s largest building by volume. The factory wasn’t even completed when the first planes were finished.

 ?? JENNIFER BUCHANAN — THE SEATTLE TIMES VIA AP ?? The last Boeing 747lands at Paine Field in Everett, Wash., on Jan. 10.
JENNIFER BUCHANAN — THE SEATTLE TIMES VIA AP The last Boeing 747lands at Paine Field in Everett, Wash., on Jan. 10.

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