DC-8 Air Travel "Jet Mainliner Flight 803" pt2-2 1959 United Air Lines
more at
http://travel.quickfound.net/
NEW VERSION in one piece instead of multiple parts: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rPSUaBZ0wJA
Public domain film from the
Library of Congress Prelinger Archive, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Douglas_DC-8
The
Douglas DC-8 is a four-engined narrow-body passenger commercial jet airliner, manufactured from
1958 to
1972 by the
Douglas Aircraft Company.
Launched later than the competing
Boeing 707, the
DC-8 nevertheless established
Douglas in a strong position in the airliner market, and remained in production until 1972 when it began to be superseded by much larger designs, including the
DC-10 and
Boeing 747. The DC-8 design allowed it to hold slightly more cargo than the
707. Dozens of re-engined examples remain in freighter service to this day, while commercial 707 service had largely ended by
2000...
Design phase
Douglas secretly began jet transport project definition studies in mid-1952. By mid-1953 these had developed into a form very similar to the final DC-8; an 80-seat, low-wing aircraft with four
Pratt & Whitney JT3C turbojet engines, 30° wing sweep, and an internal cabin diameter of exactly 11 feet (3.35 m) to allow five abreast seating.
Maximum weight was to be 95 tons (86 tonnes), and range was estimated to be about 3,000--4,
000 miles (4,800--6,400 km).
Douglas remained lukewarm about the jet airliner project, but believed that the
Air Force tanker contract would go to two companies for two different aircraft, as several
USAF transport contracts in the past had done. In May 1954, the USAF circulated its requirement for 800 jet tankers to Boeing, Douglas, Convair,
Fairchild,
Lockheed, and
Martin. Boeing was already just two months away from having their prototype in the air. Just four months after issuing the tanker requirement, the USAF ordered the first 29
KC-135s from Boeing.
Besides Boeing's ability to provide a jet tanker promptly, the flying-boom air-to-air refueling system was also a Boeing product from the
KC-97: developing the
KC-135 had been a safe bet
.
...Consultations with the airlines resulted in a number of changes: the fuselage was widened by 15 inches (38 cm) to allow six-abreast seating. This led to larger wings and tail surfaces and a longer fuselage.
The DC-8 was officially announced in July
1955. Four versions were offered to begin with, all based on the same 150-foot-6-inch (45.87 m) long airframe with a 141-foot-1-inch (43.00 m) wingspan, but varying in engines and fuel capacity, and with maximum weights of about 120--130 tons (109--118 tonnes). Douglas steadfastly refused to offer different fuselage sizes. The maiden flight was planned for December
1957, with entry into revenue service in
1959. Well aware that they were lagging behind Boeing, Douglas began a major push to market the product...
...
October 1955...
Pan American placed simultaneous orders with Boeing for 20 707s and Douglas for 25 DC-8s. To buy one expensive and untried jet-powered aircraft type was brave: to buy both was at the time, unheard of
. In the closing months of 1955, other airlines rushed to follow suit:
Air France,
American,
Braniff,
Continental and Sabena ordered 707s;
United,
National,
KLM, Eastern,
JAL and
SAS chose the DC-8. In
1956 Air India,
BOAC,
Lufthansa, Qantas and
TWA added over 50 to the 707 order book, while Douglas sold 22 DC-8s to
Delta, Swissair,
TAI, Trans-Canada and
UAT. By the start of 1958, Douglas had sold 133 DC-8s as against Boeing's
150 707s...
The first DC-8 was rolled out of the new factory at
Long Beach in April 1958...
The DC-8 entered revenue service first with
Delta Air Lines on
18 September 1959 with United also entering service later on the same day. By
March 1960, Douglas had reached their planned production rate of eight DC-8s a month....
On 21
August 1961 a Douglas DC-8 broke the sound barrier at
Mach 1.
012 (660 mph/1,062 km/h) while in a controlled dive through 41,000 feet (12,497 m) and maintained that speed, for 16 seconds. The flight was to collect data on a new leading-edge design for the wing, and while doing so, this DC-8 became the first civilian jet to make a supersonic flight. The aircraft was a DC-8-43 later delivered to
Canadian Pacific Air Lines as CF-CPG. The aircraft, crewed by
Captain William Magruder,
First Officer Paul Patten,
Flight Engineer Joseph Tomich and
Flight Test Engineer Richard Edwards, took off from
Edwards Air Force Base in
California, and was accompanied to altitude by an
F-104 flown by
Chuck Yeager...