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the jet
airliner
Like perhaps no other
single technology, the jet engine revolutionized air travel around the
world. Unlike the old propeller-driven planes that were powered by
piston engines, jet planes could fly at tremendous speeds, thus cutting
down travel time. Jet-equipped airplanes also could climb faster and
fly higher. Both the U.S. Air Force and civil aircraft builders found
these capabilities attractive in the years after World War II when
international contacts stretched across the globe. There were, however,
major concerns about transferring jet engine technology to the
commercial aviation sector. Airline executives in the post-war era were
aware that, although jet engines were simpler than the old piston
engines, they also had high operating temperatures that required very
expensive metal alloy components that ultimately would affect an
aircraft's longevity and reliability. Moreover, jet engines used far
greater amounts of fuel. The initially low takeoff speed would also
require longer runways. All of this added up to increased costs. As a
result, U.S. passenger air carriers did not support the building of jet
airliners in the immediate post-war years, and adopted a “wait-and-see”
approach before embarking on this risky path. In October 1955, Trippe signed contracts
with both companies to buy 45 of these jets (20 707s and 25 DC-8s).
Exactly two years later, Boeing rolled out the first operational 707, a
Boeing 707-120, and on October 26, 1958, amid much fanfare, Pan
American inaugurated its New York-London route, ushering in a new era
in the history of passenger aviation. On the very first flight, which
made a stopover in Newfoundland, there were 111 passengers, the largest
number ever to board a single regularly scheduled flight. Coach fares
were $272, about the same as one would expect to pay for a
piston-engine flight across the Atlantic. With its rapidly expanding use of the Boeing 707,
especially on the transatlantic route, Pan American began a period of
almost unchallenged success in the international airline industry. The
airline, for example, was the first to recognize the importance to
passengers of non-stop flights on long trips; it negotiated with Boeing
for a version of the 707 that could fly for a longer time without
refuelling, known as the 707-320.This allowed the airline to introduce
true intercontinental service with non-stop London-to-New York flights
on August 26, 1959. This was a perfect case of a dominant air carrier
playing the lead role in defining the characteristics of a new class of
jets that the industry would produce. The 707-320 was eventually
adopted by as many as eleven other airlines within a year. Within the United
States, National Airlines became the first to begin jet service, using
leased Boeing 707s, on December 10, 1958. American Airlines offered the
first domestic jet service using its own aircraft on January 25, 1959
with a flight from New York to Los Angeles. With this coast-to-coast
service, American had a big competitive coup; the two other major
domestic U.S. airlines, Trans World Airlines (TWA) and United Airlines,
had not anticipated the imminent use of jets for domestic service. TWA
quickly scrambled to catch up, and using a single Boeing 707, it joined
the coast-to-coast flight market in March 1959. The last minute move
helped keep TWA afloat through a difficult period of economic loss. One of the more unusual
aspects of the coming of the jet era was the speed with which airlines
internationally adopted these new aircraft. Partly because of Pan
American's example, airlines from all over the world replaced
piston-engine aircraft with jets at an unprecedented pace. The Soviet
national airline Aeroflot was part of this explosion. In fact, Aeroflot
held the distinction of offering the world's first regularly scheduled
and sustained passenger jet service with its Tupolev Tu-104 aircraft.
Aeroflot opened service from Moscow to Irkutsk (in the Soviet far east)
in September 1956.
Elsewhere, by 1961, just three years after Pan Am's
first jet flight, jets were flying routes over the North and South
Atlantic and the Pacific; in the domestic United States, Europe, and
East Asia; North-to-South America routes; Europe-to-Africa routes;
Europe-to-Australia routes; and even to the Arctic regions.
International airlines such as Air France, Lufthansa (Germany), KLM
(Netherlands), Iberia (Spain), QANTAS (Australia), SABENA (Belgium),
Air India, SAS (Scandinavia), Swissair, El Al (Israel), and JAL (Japan)
were all using the Boeing 707, the DC-8, or in lesser numbers, the
Corvair CV-880 jet on major international routes. |
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