History

The Boeing 747 ‘Jumbo Jet’ revolutionised air travel. Its huge size and efficiency reduced the cost of flying and made international travel commonplace. By June 2014 a total of 1,500 747s had been manufactured.

The first Boeing 747 made its maiden flight on 9 February 1969 and they began entering service in January 1970.

The 747-8 series was developed in the early 2000s with a stretched fuselage, new engines and a redesigned wing, all of which gave improved efficiency over earlier 747s and made it the world’s longest commercial aeroplane.

It was offered in two versions, a freighter and a passenger version.

The first version to fly was the 747-8F, on 3 February 2011, and they began entering service in October 2011.

By November 2014 119 of both versions of the 747-8 had been ordered and 80 had been delivered.

This model represents HL7609 flying for Korean Air Cargo in September 2014.

Revell 1/144 kit with Draw decals completed by Leigh Edmonds in December 2014.

Data

MODEL: Boeing 747-8F (Korean Air Cargo, HL7609, 2014)

ROLE: Cargo aircraft

TIME PERIOD: 2010-

ENGINES: four General Electric GEnx-2B67 turbofan engines of 296kN thrust each

WING SPAN: 68.5m

LENGTH: 76.3m

MAXIMUM TAKE OFF WEIGHT: 448,000kg

CRUISING SPEED: 898km/h

RANGE: 7899km

PAYLOAD: 132,600kg

CREW: 2

SCALE: 1/144

KIT:

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