SAAB Driver
Thats Hot
- Joined
- May 5, 2006
- Posts
- 27
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There are still some 707's flying cargo, might be one or two pax birds left, but both kinds are mostly found in thirdworld countries.
The DC-8, due to design, was much easier to stretch. The 707 due to the short landing gear would have tail issues.
Since there were quite a few DC-8's in service, UAL was operating quite a few, a company called Gamma Corp, which was mostly ex Douglas employees, designed the pylon modification which could incorporate the CFM's.
The stretched 8 was by far the most popular for the modification, becoming DC8-71 or DC8-72, however, there were a few of the DC8-62's that become -72's. The one was for an arms dealer, another belonged to Aramco and I believe NASA operated one, now with UND I believe.
The NASA/UND DC8 is sitting out at KMCC (McClellan) undergoing a D check. More patches and protrusions on that aircraft than a porcupine. I understand that a group of former UPS age 60+ guys fly it when it's inservice. Please, lets not hijack this otherwise intersesting string with some age 60 comments.
There are still some 707's flying cargo, might be one or two pax birds left, but both kinds are mostly found in thirdworld countries.
The DC-8, due to design, was much easier to stretch. The 707 due to the short landing gear would have tail issues.
Since there were quite a few DC-8's in service, UAL was operating quite a few, a company called Gamma Corp, which was mostly ex Douglas employees, designed the pylon modification which could incorporate the CFM's.
The stretched 8 was by far the most popular for the modification, becoming DC8-71 or DC8-72, however, there were a few of the DC8-62's that become -72's. The one was for an arms dealer, another belonged to Aramco and I believe NASA operated one, now with UND I believe.
I guess the short story is, that the 8 just offered more bang for the buck!
Some more info on the Mighty 8: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DC-8
I was looking at airliners.net into the size and weights of the aircraft and never considered the length. Is there a standard size pallet in the cargo world? If there is, any info on its size, the load it can take, and how many can fit on a DC-8?
Lastly, with hush kits a requirement of stage III, in 1999, did those aircraft take a hit on fuel burn to achieve the noise compliance?
I should have said DC8-71 and DC8-73 in other words, the stretch, with a few DC8-72's for good measures.
Also interesting to note, is that some 8s started as say -20's but was reengined with later model engines and became -50's.
The 61 is a stretched series, which retained the original wing, the 62 and 63 both have the long wing, the 62 with the short fuselage.
As for Igloo size, I believe the standard Igloo fits on the 707. Cannot remember the number of Igloos on the short 8, but IIRC, the long had 18 positions.
The KC-135, AFAIK, is not a 707 per se, the fuselage is not quite as wide. I guess I was right for once, here is some infop on the 135: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KC-135
I think most 3rd world operators simply free load the cargo and strap it down on pallets or cookie sheets as they are sometimes called.
Is the the KC-135 a 707 or DC-8? I always thought it was a 707. I see quite a few at Grissom ARB (GUS) when I drive by on 31.
AC560;1199377 The DC-8 and the 767-200 are two of the worst heavyweight cargo planes imho (coming from the heavy weight operations perspective).[/quote said:Yea it's a real $hitty airframe....Hauls 100,000 lbs across the North Atlantic non stop.
Yea it's a real $hitty airframe....Hauls 100,000 lbs across the North Atlantic non stop.
Neither. A KC-135 is actually a B-720. The B-707 had different fuselage and wing dimensions. Same type rating, however.