History

The Boeing 727 is one of the most important airliners in aviation history. Over 1800 were manufactured, 582 of them the early 727-100 version. Boeing 727-100s introduced Australians to domestic jet travel in November 1964.

Development of the Boeing 727 began in the late 1950s and detailed design began in June 1959.

It was given three jet engines at the rear of the fuselage to give the airliner additional power and a clean wing for aerodynamic efficiency.

The prototype made its initial flight on 9 February 1963.
The Boeing 727-100 was the first version of the 727 to be produced and 582 were made.

Eventually twelve 727-100s flew for Australia two major airlines and several were converted to freighters or imported to fill that role in Australia and on services to nearby countries.

This model represents VH-RME of Ansett-ANA which made the first 727 passenger flight in Australia on 2 November 1964.

Airfix 1/144 kit with Hawkeye decals completed by Leigh Edmonds in April 2016.

Data

MODEL: Boeing 727-100 (Ansett-ANA, VH-RME, 196)

ROLE: Airliner

TIME PERIOD: 1963 -

ENGINES: three Pratt & Whitney JT8D-7 turbojets of 62.3kN thrust each

WING SPAN: 32.92m

LENGTH: 40.59m

MAXIMUM TAKE OFF WEIGHT: 76,700kg

CRUISING SPEED: 960km/h

RANGE: 4,170km

PAYLOAD: 125 passengers or 21,213kg freight

CREW: 3 flight crew

SCALE: 1/144

KIT:

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