Douglas DC-9
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The design of the DC-9 was completely new, with T-tail and rear fuselage mounted engines. The aircraft was purpose-built for short to medium routes, and to serve smaller airports, often poor equipped and with short runways which bigger aircrafts like [[Boeing 707]] couldn’t serve. This made the DC-9 popular and widely used. There was build nearly 2500 DC-9 in more than 11 different variants. | The design of the DC-9 was completely new, with T-tail and rear fuselage mounted engines. The aircraft was purpose-built for short to medium routes, and to serve smaller airports, often poor equipped and with short runways which bigger aircrafts like [[Boeing 707]] couldn’t serve. This made the DC-9 popular and widely used. There was build nearly 2500 DC-9 in more than 11 different variants. | ||
− | There has been made a special version of DC-9 for military purposes | + | There has been made a special version of DC-9 for military purposes named McDonnell Douglas C-9. |
Revision as of 11:23, 29 April 2010
The Douglas DC-9 is a jet aircraft in av8.It can be optionally replaced by the British Aerospace BAC 1-11 if the appropriate parameter bit is set.
Stats
Introduction | 1965 |
---|---|
Withdrawal | 2035 |
Aircraft Type | Small |
Cruising Speed | 560mph |
Landing Speed | 152mph |
Capacity | 90 pax & 20 mail, or 60 crates of goods |
Information
The small, speedy and efficient DC-9 was one of the longest-produced jetliners of all time, with a production run spanning 41 years.
The design of the DC-9 was completely new, with T-tail and rear fuselage mounted engines. The aircraft was purpose-built for short to medium routes, and to serve smaller airports, often poor equipped and with short runways which bigger aircrafts like Boeing 707 couldn’t serve. This made the DC-9 popular and widely used. There was build nearly 2500 DC-9 in more than 11 different variants.
There has been made a special version of DC-9 for military purposes named McDonnell Douglas C-9.
The picture shows a DC-9-82 (from 1983 designated MD82) introduced in 1982.