Boeing Commercial Airplanes

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Boeing Commercial Airplanes
Private
(division of The Boeing Company)
Industry Aviation
Founded July 15, 1916 (July 15, 1916)
Founder William Boeing
Headquarters Renton, Washington, United States
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Raymond Conner, President and CEO
Products 737, 747, 767, 777, 787, Boeing Business Jet (BBJ)
Services Maintenance, Training
Revenue US$60 billion (FY 2014[1])
Number of employees
83,347
Parent The Boeing Company
Website boeing.com/commercial/
Footnotes / references
[2][3]

Boeing Commercial Airplanes (BCA) designs, assembles, markets and sells jet airliners and business jets (Boeing Business Jets); it also provides product-related maintenance and training to customers worldwide.[2] A business division of parent Boeing, Boeing Commercial Airplanes operates from division headquarters in Renton, Washington and more than one dozen engineering, manufacturing and assembly facilities located throughout the United States and internationally.[3] Boeing Commercial Airplanes includes the assets of the Douglas Aircraft division of the former McDonnell Douglas Corporation, which merged with Boeing in 1997.[4] The current President and CEO of Boeing Commercial Airplanes is Raymond Conner, the former head of Sales, Marketing and Services.

Products

Model naming convention

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For all models sold beginning with the Boeing 707 in 1957, Boeing's naming system for commercial airliners has taken the form of 7X7. All model designations from 707 through 787 have been assigned, leaving 797 as the only 7X7 model name not assigned to a product.

For model numbers in the 707 to 777 range, the model number consists of an airplane's model number, for example 707 or 747, followed by a dash and three digits that represent the series within the model, for example 707-320 or 747-400. In aviation circles, a more specific model designation is sometimes used where the last two digits of the series designator are replaced by the two digit, alpha-numeric Boeing customer code, for example 747-121, representing a 747-100 originally ordered by Pan American World Airways (Boeing customer code 21) or 737-7H4, representing a 737-700 originally ordered by Southwest Airlines (Boeing customer code H4). Unlike other models, the 787 uses a single digit to designate the series, for example 787-8. This convention was followed in the development of the newest version of the 747, the 747-8. The 747 is the only model to use both the triple and single-digit designations (i.e., the 747-200, the 747-400, and the 747-8).

Additional letters are sometimes appended to the model name as a suffix, including "ER" to designate an "extended range" version, such as the 777-300ER, or "LR" to designate a "long range" version, for example 777-200LR. Other suffix designators include "F" for "freighter", (747-400F) "C" for "convertible" aircraft that can be converted between a passenger and freighter configuration (727-100C) and "M" for "combi" aircraft that are configured to carry both passengers and freight at the same time (757-200M, 747-400M). Passenger aircraft that are originally manufactured as passenger aircraft and later converted to freighter configuration by Boeing carry the suffix "BCF" designating a Boeing converted freighter (747-400BCF).

Aircraft in production or development

Product list and details
Aircraft model Variants in production Description Capacity First flight Out-of-production variants
737 700, 800, 900ER, BBJ, C-40, 737 AEW&C, P-8 Twin‑engine, single aisle, short- to medium-range narrow-body 085-215 April 9, 1967 100, 200, 200C, 200 Adv, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700ER, 900[5]
747 8I, 8F, BBJ Four‑engine, partial double deck, twin aisle main deck, single aisle upper deck, medium- to long-range widebody 467-605 February 9, 1969 100, 100SR, 100B, 200, 200F, 200C, SP, 200M, 300, 300M, 300SR, 400, 400M, 400D, 400F, 400ER, 400ERF, VC-25, E-4, YAL-1
767 300F, KC-767, KC-46 Twin-engine, twin aisle, medium- to long-range widebody 180-375 September 26, 1981 200, 200ER, 300, 300ER, 400ER,[6] E-767
777 300ER, Freighter[7] Twin-engine, twin aisle, medium- to long-range, ultra long-range (200LR), widebody 301-550 June 12, 1994 200, 200ER, 200LR, 300
787 8, 9,[8] 10, BBJ[9] Twin-engine, twin aisle, long-range widebody 210-330[10] December 15, 2009
Future airliner models
Expected
EIS
Type Description Notes
2017 737 MAX A new 737 series based on 737NG with new engines
2020 777X New 777 series, with the lengthened 777-9X, and extra long range 777-8X. It has a new engine, and new composite wings with folding wingtip
Y1/737RS Code name for the Boeing 737 and 757-200 replacement project
Y3 Code name for the Boeing 747 and 777-300 replacement project

Orders and deliveries

The table below lists only airplanes from the jet era

Aircraft Orders Deliveries Unfilled
707
1010
1010
717
155
155
727
1831
1831
737 Original
1144
1144
737 Classic
1988
1988
737 NG
6942
5542
1400
737 MAX
2869
2869
747
1418
1418
747-8
123
94
29
757
1049
1049
767
1162
1079
83
777
1575
1329
246
777X
306
306
787
1095
335
760
Totals
22667
16957
5710

Data from Boeing through end of August 2015[11]

Discontinued aircraft

Aircraft
model
Number
built
Notes
1 2
6 1
6D 2
7
8 1
40 84
64 1
80 16
81 2
95 25
200 Monomail 1 converted into Model 221A as 8-passenger airliner
203 7
204 7
221 Monomail 1 converted into Model 221A as 8-passenger airliner
247 75
307 Stratoliner 10
314 Clipper 12
367-80 1
377 Stratocruiser 56 Civil development of the military C-97
707/720 1,010
717 156 Formerly the MD-95, evolved from the McDonnell Douglas DC-9 family
727 1,832
757 1,050

Gallery

Specialty and other aircraft

Airlines commonly order aircraft with special features or options, but Boeing builds certain models specifically for a particular customer.

  • The Boeing 707-138B was a shortened-fuselage, long-range model only sold to Qantas.
  • The Boeing 757-200M was a single-example model built for Royal Nepal Airlines (now called Nepal Airlines). This plane could be converted between passenger and freighter configuration. It was launched by Royal Nepal Airlines in 1986 and delivered two years later.
  • Boeing 747
  • Boeing was a consultant to Sukhoi on the Russian Regional Jet program that subsequently became the Sukhoi Superjet 100 twin-engine narrowbody airliner.

Concepts

Airfoils

  • Boeing 103 - used on Model 40 and F2B
  • Boeing 103A - used on F2B and F3B
  • Boeing 106 - used on Model 80, P-12, Monomail, Model 226
  • Boeing 106B - used on Model 95, Model 247D, P-12
  • Boeing 106R - used on various Beriev models
  • Boeing 109 - used on Model 95 and P-26
  • Boeing 117 - used on XPBB, B-29 and derivatives (307, 367, 377), all Aero Spacelines models, Tupolev Tu-4, Tu-70, Tu-75, Tu-80.

Organization

Boeing Commercial Airplanes (BCA) is organized as:

  • Airplane Programs
    • Renton - 737, BBJ, P-8A Poseidon
    • Everett - 747, 767, 777, 787
    • Fabrication Division
    • Global Partners
    • Propulsion Systems
  • 787 Program
  • Commercial Aviation Services

BCA subsidiaries:

Major facilities

See also

References

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  6. The Boeing 767 family. Boeing.
  7. Boeing 777 Family. Boeing Commercial Airplanes
  8. Trimble, Stephen. "Boeing shows off completed horizontal stabiliser for 787-9". Flight International, January 15, 2013.
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  10. 787-8 Fact Sheet, 787-9 Fact Sheet. Boeing.
  11. http://active.boeing.com/commercial/orders/index.cfm?content=displaystandardreport.cfm&pageid=m25066&RequestTimeout=20000
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  13. Aeroinfo Systems
  14. Aviall, Inc.
  15. Aviation Partners Boeing
  16. Boeing Training & Flight Services
  17. CDG
  18. Preston Aviation Solutions
  19. "Boeing Acquires Alenia North America's Interest in Global Aeronautica". Boeing, December 22, 2009.

External links