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As the last Boeing 747 leaves the factory, it's time to celebrate the plane's success, not to wallow in nostalgia.
The four-engine "Queen of the Skies" will keep flying, but Boeing has built its last 747 jumbo jet, as airlines turn to more efficient two-engine models.
Boeing 747s have been out of production for some time now due to better jets on the market. However, there are still a few airlines that use them.
"Alligator Alcatraz" lies about 40 miles west of Miami International Airport and halfway to Naples. Over the past week, the DeSantis administration built the detention camp in the idle airstrip, owned ...
Horrifying video captured the moment a Lufthansa Airlines Boeing 747 bounced off the LAX runway twice before aborting its landing this week.
TAIPEI, Taiwan -- Another airline has said its final goodbye to the Boeing 747 passenger jet. That come Monday as Taiwan-based EVA Air retired its last passenger version of the jumbo jet in Taipei.
BOC Aviation has placed three Boeing 747-8 freighters with new customer Atlas Air and signed sale-and-leaseback deals for 15 new Airbus A320neos with Frontier.
Middle Eastern carrier Emirates is wet-leasing a pair of Boeing 747-400 freighters to lift capacity for its SkyCargo division.
Airline orders were slowing and costs for the 747 and the supersonic jet, which the company would abandon in 1971, were soaring. Then, a crisis arrived.
The Boeing 747, known as the "Queen of the Skies," revolutionized air travel since its first flight in 1969. It's now mostly a cargo plane, and the last 747 just rolled off Boeing's production lines.
Boeing bid farewell to the iconic 747, delivering the final plane to Atlas Air on Tuesday afternoon and marking an end of an era when the first-ever "jumbo jet" ruled the skies.