Even though most people have seen a 747, people will still take pictures as we taxi into a lot of airports around the world... I doubt many pilots have that same experience! She's iconic.
Heyyyy you must be a pilot! wheres your avaitors Kels? i almost didnt realise your status mate! Will you ever fly into Brisbane? Id love to wave to you as you land mate!
I still love seeing it, it looks so gorgeous, though I only flew on one once as a child. These days transatlantic are using 2 engine long distance ones. I am jealous you get to the fly it
Hi K .... Can you please do a Hollywood Vs Reality on the movies ... Airport and Airport 1975 ? I have been asking you for years to do this with no answer from you . Thanks
I wouldn't call this a "rise and fall" ... the Queen of the Skies reigned for over 60 years, that's an impressive amount of time with hundreds built! So it is quite the success story!
A380 is a 'Rise and Fall' story. To attempt to apply that to the 747 is nothing short of clickbait. The story of the 747 is 'The Icon that Changed the World'. And one excellent measure of how iconic something is would be to highlight its cultural impact. Look at all the Hollywood movies which used the 747 as the leading character. You don't see movies where the star is, say, an Airbus. I'm not aware of a single one. There must be at least one, yet nothing comes to mind. Nor, for that matter, any movie centered on a 787. Nor a 777. Nor a 737. Etc. If anyone did it, it wasn't memorable. Not to me. The 747 was and is a star. It deserves a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. It is that iconic. You cannot say this for any other airliner. And almost no other aircraft. When it comes to all vehicles which were ever made, the only other one that comes to mind as being a cultural icon of similar magnitude would be the VW Bug. So maybe the hump is the key to making a beautiful design that no one can forget. When it comes to the 747, the story is: 'The Rise, and Rise, and Rise of the 747 ...and eventual graceful fade half a century later.'
@@lordsiomaitoo expensive, which meant not enough people would be able to afford the fares for them to justify the other issues. Can it be feasibly done now? I don't know.
That is an absurd statement. And the 747 certainly had its falls too. The Concorde was in a different league. It's like comparing a Ferrari to a Cadillac or a Jaguar.
Aw, an icon finally takes a bow and goes down to into history. Legandary as she is, she will never be forgotten, her shape, her size and her service through billion of passengers that she carried all this years. Thank you.
Magical aircraft. My late dad flew her with German Cargo on his last assignment and was in his element in the cockpit. I can still vividly remember him taking me to Chicago on a 74. All the way across the Atlantic. Just me, dad and his two fellow crewmen...imagine that...
My uncle was the facility maintence supervisor for northwest airlines at one time. He took me into the hanger in Duluth, MN, and they had been restoring two 747’s. They had the glass cockpit installed but the fuselage was an empty shell. Got to sit in the pilots seat and fondle anything I wanted in that plane. It was incredible. Uncle threw me up inside one of the engines and we took a picture together inside the jet engine. Still have it framed 30 years later.
Great story. I love the 47. The last time I flew on one was when I flew back from Australia. It is hard to believe any plane can fly from Sydney to San Francisco nonstop. But the 747 could.
@@pooryorick831 If you find that hard to believe, there are planes now that are flying from Houston to Sydney nonstop. Over 1000 miles further than the distance from Sydney - SF!
Best plane ever built. My father flew for Pan Am for 37 years. He loved his job and loved the 747. Thanks great tribute. Glad they mentioned PanAm that's why we had the 707 and 747.
I’m a bit sad that in 1977 that the 2nd ever built 747. More specifically the Boeing 747-100 registered N747PA. Flying as Pan Am 1736 Was involved in an accident with KLM 4805 another Boeing 747 specifically the 747-200. I’m unsure about the registration but definitely under Dutch registration. Both planes were a write off. I’m likely aware you may know this accident but I thought I would mention it.
@@gregparrott If Pan American World Airways service was ‘dismal’ as you state , then why have todays best international carriers Emirates , Qatar , Singapore Airlines modeled themselves on the “Worlds Greatest Airline” R.E.G. Davies ??
Yup, I was a 74 captain for 25 years, all models. I can’t help but think almost each day how lucky I have been to fly all around the world with the Queen of the Skies. She was elegant, sturdy, safe and fast and oh boy, she could deliver an inner sense of pride and accomplishment !
I am a retired LA City employee after 36 years of service. I worked as a gardener for LA city near LAX. I first saw a Continental Airlines 747 in 1970 taking off from LAX. I just stood in awe as SHE was "getting out of dodge" if you know what I I mean. Then in 1979, I flew on a PAN AM 747 from LAX to New York JFK. Maaaan, she was huge and during the flight I was ALL over HER and I could not stay seated. None of the flight attendants was on me about keeping my seat. I had never been on anything so huge and so beautiful. And with as many of other passenger jets I have flown on(mostly all of them), that flight on the PAN AM is my most memorable one. Times change and it really breaks my heart to see HER leave us. She WILL forever be the QUEEN OF THE SKIES. I sit here @ my computer for hours and hours watching the videos of the 747 taking off and landing and continuing to move passengers to and fro. Thank You Mr. Boeing. Keep building the best planes.
I was a 747-400 pilot from 2008-2013…the best airplane I’ve ever flown with regards to performance, and hands down, the best looking airplane ever designed!
I have flown over 3 million miles on a 747 going back to the early 80's. Mainly the USA and Asia, Europe, Australia. The irony is that my first job out of college was working in the 747 factory in Everett 2 years before my first 747 flight. I've flown on almost every version including a combi and an SP. I've flown in every class including the upper deck which was my favorite. Thank you Boeing 747,
I have flown on the 747 numerous times. When I was active duty military, the charter airlines would sometimes deploy these for overseas flights from the US. I felt like I was riding a ship in the sky. My best experience was on an Air France 747-400 from Atlanta to Paris. Besides the awesome service, the aircraft felt like butter in the air. It is such a beautiful aircraft!!! I've worked on National and Atlas cargo 747s for years. Highly efficient jets. Definitely gonna miss flying them.
Thank you for your service. I too have flown in this beautiful jet many times, as civilian , but would have loved a chance to fly on one of those charters!
This is about "Evolution of the Market," not a "Fall" of the B747. She served her purpose and helped usher in the age we are now if even if she precepted her own obsolescence. Loved flying the 747 - especially the -400 and, more recently, the -8. Always a fantastic ride.
I remember when this plane came out when I was a kid. It STILL is the most beautiful plane out there. I was glad I got to fly on one by accident because another flight got cancelled.
When I was a kid in the early 80s, my dad who worked for the DOD took me to see the Space shuttle Columbia while it was mounted on top of a 747. It was parked on a tarmac away from the passenger jets outside of the Lambert airport in St. Louis, where fighter jets were parked and maintained, etc. With his DOD badge, we sped by the military guard and drove right up to the 747. As we got of our '78 Mercury, I remember how excited my dad and I were to see the space shuttle in person, but as I began to walk underneath the 747 I became more interested in the plane. I was amazed by how huge this plane was. The landing gear was massive, with tires taller than me and engines that looked as big as a car. Forty plus years later I still remember this like it was yesterday. What an era and experience to remember. No way this would be possible in today's time. Going to miss seeing this beautiful work of flying art... Thanks for the memories, Dad! Miss ya! RIP
your dad is up in heaven where that airplane still flies, its a miracle he gets to laugh at all the crazy antics and whispers in a pasenger brain "come fly with me"
My first trip on an airplane was in 1979. I flew out to LAX from JFK with my grandma and the flight out to LAX was a 747. I remember looking out the window at the gate in awe of that jet. I also remember walking past the spiral stair case on my way to the coach section of the plane. I got to fly on the 747 quite a few times as an adult but I will never forget the first time I got to fly on that plane.
I still remember my first 747 flight. South African Airways from Johannesburg to London Heathrow. I was an unaccompanied minor, flying to visit the UK at the age of 7. I was in awe of the double isles, how long the wings were and how smooth the plane was. I flew this route many times over, but never got over that initial fascination when I stepped on the 747 for the first time. What a lucky experience!
I was a kid when this aircraft was introduced and was lucky to see it take off and land throughout the day when the pilots did actual manual training before sim was available . Never got tired of it. I've seen it up close while it was parking and it was like a giant bearing down . In the air at more than 30k feet going to London it was smooth as silk and touchdown was a caress. It is more like an emperor with the sky its realm. Certainly wrong to term it a fall; more like a gradual phase out . Long live !
A similar experience could be had at Shannon Airport where 747 aircrew would practice take offs and landings in comfort because Shannon is not too busy at the present time. The National flag carrier, Aer Lingus, no longer flies the 747 because it is more economical to fly twins, mostly from Dublin to the US. Shannon only has a very limited service now since the government mandated stop-over was got rid of. I was lucky to have at least 8 flights in this type and enjoyed every minute of those flights.
I flew 747s several times when living in Hawaii and flying to the East Coast. Take offs were smooth and powerful - impossible to lift my head from rest until it had climbed in altitude. Landings were smooth. Their were bars throughout the plane where (and when) passengers could stand and chat with others. Unlike today's flights, seats were comfortable and plenty of legroom. Food was delicious and free! First Class was "upstairs". I miss the glory of 747s...nothing like it since.
The 747 is an icon. The queen of the skies. She’ll always have a special place in our hearts as plane enthusiasts. The 747 blazed a path for the next generation of wide-body aircraft to innovate. I’m excited and interested to see what Airbus and Boeing will do in my lifetime, especially with COMAC entering the market.
Exactly the 747 Connected Australia, (my country) with the world. The 747 is essentially the penultimate toyota landcruiser of the sky, she was built and is still improved on until im guessing the very last one graces our skies. Shes a lot noisier than say the new dreamliner, but if i ahd a choice id go 747 over a dreamliner anyday.
The 747 is the most beautiful commercial aircraft ever designed. They really do define the skies. It is great to see them in use as freighters today and hopefully decades to come.
I remember as a child flying on 747s during family vacations. The comfy seats and real soft landings. Definitely a far cry from today's airline experiences.
My first international flight from South Africa to New York was on a 747 when I was just 7 years old. One of the fondest memories of my childhood. I was so amazed at the sheer size of her and that iconic hump. I remember wishing me and my sister would sit on the top deck, didn't understand the differences in classes. She's truly the queen of the skies❤❤
My first time flying the upper deck was something I never have forgotten… after dozens of journeys across the Atlantic and Pacific from the 747-100 to the 747-400 I’ll never forget the magical experience that came with it, I’ll surely miss her.
Power, style, function: the 747 will always be Queen of the Skies ! Others may be bigger, but no plane can equal the legendary 747. I'm crushed that the last 747 has left the building. PETITION BOEING TO KEEP MAKING THESE PLEASE !
I recall as a child watching the very 1st 747 do its madden test flight on television. I heard the loud sound of its jet engines; I ran outside and looked up as she flew over our house at low altitude, my gosh id never seen anything so large in the skys before. I fell in love with that aircraft at that moment!
I was 3 and half when my family and I immigrated from India to the USA, it was on a 747. I remember it being big. This was in 1974. It will always hold a special place in my heart.
me too, from europe. i was 7. our seats were broken and the only extra seats were upstairs first class. best flight ever! and we had nothing at the time.
In '73 I flew United from JFK to SFO, I made reservations on the flight just because it was scheduled to go as a 747. It was a repositioning flight for the airplane, there weren't more than 30 passengers on board. The flight crew was so accommodating, I got to tour the entire aircraft during our flight. It was a grand experience of one grand aircraft.
I had the same experience, in the opposite direction: SFO ->JFK, a TWA red-eye flight with more crew than passengers. We all gathered at the bar and had a great time - I'm sure the attendants, who were delighted to have no workload to speak of, broke more than a few rules on that flight. They enjoyed an enviable lifestyle (from my 23-year-old point of view) in the mid-'70s.
Planes come and go. Technology keeps changing. More and more airlines are moving towards twin engine planes. Even Airbus had this problem with the gorgeous A340. I was glad to fly one of those before the A330 rendered it obsolete overnight. Soon airlines were canceling their orders and asking Airbus to make more A330s as well as the A300NEO. According to some aviation business analysts, the A300NEO may have been the catalyst that led to the LionAir tragedy. Boeing was in panic mode when the NEO got its first customer so they rushed out a modified 737 with much larger engines and called it the 737MAX. They didn't bother telling the customers that the plane had a deadly flaw in its software called MCAS. This was blamed on not one but TWO crashes that tragically killed all aboard and led to a massive investigation which led to Boeing's reputation being permanently stained. It was so controversial that the suffix MAX isn't even used on new Boeing planes any more because hearing it angers people so much. Just tragic. I still cannot believe how many lives were lost because of one tiny flaw in the software...
I honestly haven't seen one in like 20 years. But I think a new twin-engine concept can work today. Nothing beats its freight capability, military and civil.
I went to Germany from Minneapolis on a 747. I specifically remember taking off and watching the plane's wing starting to lift as we were taxing down the runway an thinking Ok, at any moment the rest of the plane should follow suit. It quickly did. It was the best quality flight the entire way.
Wonderful memory! I used to fly out of Minneapolis to Tokyo and back on the 747 every summer as a child. Sometimes in both the lower and upper deck First Class thanks to a family friend who worked at NWA at the time. Fabulous experience and memories. The most memorable probably being flying right through a typhoon out to Tokyo and being in the lower first class, right at the nose. I certainly miss seeing the regular NWA/Delta 747's at MSP, but we still get regular UPS 747 freighters coming in :-)
To an ordinary flier, I am proud to say that I flown once from Manila to Davao via Philippine Airlines in 2012. And the experienced was superb, I haven't feel any turbulence during the entire flight. It was fantastic! The sad thing, when I came back to Manila - the Davao to Manila flight operated by A321 aircraft. But I was grateful to experienced it.
It was probably in 2012 that I also flew Manila to Davao. Funny thing was I just walked into the ticket office at NAIA and asked what flights would cost to various places. They had a Manila/Davao flight for 1000p leaving in 2 hours so I booked it. Much to my surprise, it was a 747 (I was accustomed to much smaller planes when flying domestic in the Philippines). To my greater surprise, I was seated in the top level business section. I think the flight was only 90 minutes and that was the worst part of the experience…we had to land…I wished I could have spent many more hours in that seat.
I dont think the 747 failed in these modern times It paved the way to our airline industry. Its contributions alone outweigh its shortcomings. So yeah this plane will forever be the queen of the skies
Rode on this beauty in the business class. Most comfortable flight. Narita to Hong Kong. Service was excellent. Luxoury class. A sheer joy to ride. FOUR ENGINES ARE FOR ME. Felt very safe. Bring it back.
My most memorable 747 flight was from Montreal to Amsterdam. There was a bad thunderstorm in Montreal and we were one hour late on our departure. The flight attendants were adamant that we would not put anything other than just overcoats or other soft items in the overhead storage. People were unhappy about all the luggage that had to go under the seats, occupying all the accustomed foot space. But what else could we do. Like said, the crew was adamant. So, we took off and my seat was far back, where the plane started getting narrow. In fact, I had a straight view along the right isle all the way to the very front. And then it happened, we flew right through the remainder of the storm. Looking at the isle, I saw what felt like 15 degree twist left and right. Probably it was less -- I said it felt like that much. Anyway, about half of the overhead storage doors popped open and the coats dropped down. I think not many passengers were unhappy any more that there were no hard pieces of luggage up there. Well, the frightening experience lasted some 5 or 10 minutes. And the rest of the flight was smooth. But I keep my memory of the big 747 twisting that way.
I also made a trip in a 747 from Montreal to Vancouver, it was before september 2001 and I got to spend about half an hour in the cockpit with the pilots and had the best view over the snowy peaks of the rockies, the windows allow you to see below you, just breathtaking
Sometimes will happen we don’t expect by 😢very much but we all need the toilet and right behind the cockpit we have a toilet I needed the toilet and then we got in a air hole so long time that I was thinking we don’t stop before we are all the way down we dropped 800 meters free fall i stud and got almost airborne in the toilet and when we got air again over the wings and I went out and I had never seen anything like that all coffee ☕️ cups and food was all over top sealing and passenger was chock 😅
The end for now, however but how much does a boing with full fuel ⛽️ and cargo and 400 passengers 200000 liters is filled In Copenhagen and with 1012 millibar truly and we can fill 200 tons fuel in danmark but when we need to take of in Bank convoluted can we only have 180,000 liters why?because we normally have 1012 bar to press down the fuel ⛽️ but in bk the weather doesn’t have so much pressure like maybe 8010 bar pressure so we can’t have more fuel and the distance must we safe on the home flight ✈️ 😊
I flew that aircraft from the beginning at Pan Am then again at DeltaI took the first Delta 747 to Tokyo after so many years. It was like riding a bicycle..you never forget.. I loved that airplane❤ Valerie Matei
I remember seeing a 747 for the first time at Heathrow airport London , I was flying Pan am to Hong Kong , the first thing to appear was the rear tail fin behind a building like a shark fin in the sea , then the nose appeared ..it was magnificent just amazing, my first thought after being seated was how it would get off the ground , I looked around and thought you could play football inside here..such a smooth plane... A 747 was just a special plane .
I am so grateful to have ridden this beauty. When I was little between the years 2002- until about 2010, we went from Sweden to Bangkok in a 747 every year. The last time I went on it was in 2020 (probably the last time :(.... Then it was a 747a extra inserted between bangkok-Phuket, I called up upgraded to Business class immediately I saw it was a 747a. An old beautiful classic plane a this once. Rest in peace
I'm a Proud Incredible. Part of the Multiple Award Winning 747 E-4440 final assembly crew, that went 2 1/2 years on a 3 day cycle, at 100%. Not a single traveler in all that time. We could have done it in 2 days 🤗 But we were pretty much 100% all the time. It was Fun !!! Best Aircraft Ever. ...no bias 😏
When I graduated as an engineer in 1996, my first job was with Boeing. My first flight on the 747 was from London to Los Angeles at the hump. What a beauty. At the time, British Airways still preserved a high level of service, which made the experience delightful.
My first flight on a 47 was in 1970 with Japan Air lines from San Francisco to Tokyo. The attention to detail back then was unimaginable in todays world. I felt like royalty. Now I would rather take the Greyhound than an airplane. LOL I spent over 50 years in the aviation industry, and the aircraft I loved to fly in most were the DC-3, The 707. and the 747. Three of the most iconic aircraft in aviation history.
@@Dave-ty2qp Above all, it has always been a symbol of American inventiveness and business savviness. As to the service, my experience was good, but I am sure you experienced it at its apex.
The rise and fall? She may have finally gone out of production, but the Queen never fell. She had but one actual competitor (the A380) and watched her come and go. The A380s will be long retired when the last 747 makes its final flight decades from now. Even then she will live on as one of the legendary aircraft of all times. Long live the Queen.
My father was a Flight Engineer for the 747 for 36 years. There's a small bunk bed in there for staff to sleep in for long hauls. I've sat in the cockpit over a few dozen times during take offs and landings.
Sometimes during the 80s or 90s, my wife, our two sons, and I flew non-stop from NYC La Guardia to Zurich, Switzerland, and back. Our plane was a special 747 that was shorter than the usual ones and was designed for non-stop service to very far away destinations. Best of all, it was free !! Holiday Inns had a point system that rewarded you for 100 points determined by the number of days you stayed in an HI. A flaw in the system was exploited by yours truly, a frequent flyer. One point for one night; two points for three nights. OR, THREE points for THREE nights if you changed hotels. It was inconvenient, but I was determined. Your reward was a free hotel AND air flights for 2 anywhere in the world there was an HI. SO, we chose Switzerland. What an awesome memory.. Thank you Holiday Inns, and Budget Rent a Car who provided the free rental car. We traveled, by car, all over Switzerland according to a map marked out for us by the Hotel Manager every morning. We went to parts of the country where they had never seen tourists. They could not speak English, not could we speak any of their languages. There was a lot of pointing and gestures but we always had dinner, and we always found our way back to Zurich. We extended our stay for 9 days and really enjoyed ourselves.
I have flown on the 747 once in my life, way back in 1978 with Air India from London Heathrow to JFK, and to this day, it's still my favorite plane ever!!!
A timely doco'. Thank you folks for the snapshot history. I have only flown on the 747 a couple of times during my 72 years, but - among the thousands watching this looming giant approach Auckland airport on its inaugural flight to New Zealand to a perfect touchdown in just a few hundred metres was astounding! It is imprinted on my memory for ever.
In 1975 I flew in a 747 from San Francisco to Oahu. Nothing compared to it. It was like a huge butterfly in the sky. Unfortunately for United Airlines it was less then half full. Talking with a stewardess the flight only made money because of the added cargo it was able to carry. The 747 consumed 500 gallons of fuel per hour according to the stewardess. When it touched down I could see but not feel it landing. Smooth is the best word to describe the jet on take-off, flight, and landing.
As someone born in the 1970s, the Boeing 747-400 represented the apex of all the airplanes that I know of. The model name comes naturally with an impression of importance, grandeur, and safety. Somehow I felt more relaxed if I was in a 747-400. Kind sentimental to see it’s becoming part of the passing history too.
right? because we were introduced to the world of 'big planes" through the 747, all the movies the stories are 747, and it was THE plane to carry heavy things, like the Space shuttle.
As a recent retired flight attendant I always loved flying on many 747 planes ✈️ they were so iconic and the pilots were so professional they could land them like glass I miss flying on them
My first international flight was in 1992 on a Qantas 747 bound for LA. I was upgraded to business class and sat up in the hump, it opened up the world to me
A classic, just such a classic -- as you wait anywhere for a flight, you are always looking around and keeping your eyes open just to see this amazing plane.
I flew the 747 since infancy while traveling to Hong Kong. It was always a given that I'll be on a 747. But in 2001, a new 777-200 from Continental flew me to Tokyo from IAH Houston and I was so impressed that a 2 engine jet could do the 747's job. I was impressed but at the same time a little sad that the trusty 747 that's always been synonymous with long haul travel was now losing its glory, 22 years ago. I was thinking to myself then that the 747 is quickly becoming an outdated aircraft as much I loved it. Going forward after my first 777 flight in 2001 I was able to catch a few 747-400s, which I thought then would last for many years to come but, sadly less than a decade after those flights, the 747-400s were quickly being replaced by many airlines. My last ever 747 flight was on a United 747-400 from SFO-HKG in late 2016. It was time I wished could last a little more longer. Now as of 2023, I don't think I'll ever catch a 747 again. Well, if there any airlines or even freighters that are flying the 747 for "decades to come" I'd hope every 747 owner would completely retire the airplane on its 100th anniversary since its first flight on February 9, 2069! That would be the GREATEST 747 farewell ever!
I fly the 74-8 for a cargo operator and I have many hours starting in the odd ball 74-1 and the 74-2 and the 74-4. It has been a very safe air frame for myself to make a living since 1992. The airline business has had many ups and downs but I feel like a survivor and the govt. will clip my wings long before the last 74 leaves the sky
I made a 13-hr flight from San Francisco to Tokyo on a JAL 747 in 1983. I had flown back to the States on a C-5, accompanied by 40 drunk Marines, so my pregnant self was very appreciative of the space and whisper-smooth ride of the Queen of the Skies.
I started my career as an Air traffic controller in control tower at Karachi International Airport . Those days Clipper 1 & 2 were flying all around the world. B747 had the Majestic takeover and landing . It could land using short part of runway. Even in case of immediate takeoff the aircraft was borne before our estimation. I still missed those graceful takeoff and majestic landing. It is life . New innovation takes place . Now I am a retired aeronautical engineer.
i flew on british airways on a 747 in december of 2019 mainly so i could fly on one before they were phased out, little did i know about covid which would put them out almost right after :( they’re such amazing planes
As soon as they started with that Covid nonsense I knew BA would phase them out almost immediately and they did. They had 31 in service when they scrapped them. Outrageous.
I saw the very 1st 747 flight and still remember it for it being so big. Forward 10 years and I was an engineer for the 747. It was interesting to look through all the different studies that had been done on how to vary it’s design for different uses.
Definitely a pioneer not only in aviation but also in the way it changed our lives. The 747 was able to take us to places around the world that we only could have dreamed of a century ago. It also helped to develop a global economy with its ability to carry large amounts of cargo. Whenever you set foot in a 747, it inspired confidence in your flight. It's definitely the end of an era with its retirement but hopefully the lessons it taught us will inspire us to greater an ever greater successor.
What still amazes me is that it's the only airplane able to put cities, airlines, and airports on the map. It raised the profile of every place and everything it went to.
An accomplished jet like the 747 can never fall, it has simply served its purpose and now the next generation of aircraft can take over from where it has left off.
Its funny to think, that most if not all carriers alive today made their bread and butter off the back of this queen of the skies. Fact remains, theres still a lot of countries like australia where flying a giant bus packed with people is more economical than running two and a half dreamliners, but meh Im not a airline ceo grub. hahaha
The purpose of the 747, to bring affordable but luxurious air travel, has been retired. The 747 is still the best aircraft for this role, but the role doesn't exist in the modern day of selling less tickets at higher prices. Aviation is regressing to the days of the 707 and DC-8, smaller aircraft with longer ranges.
My first flight from Delhi to Mumbai back in 2012 was in in an Air India 747. At that time I didnt knew what the aircraft was, but now I know and I feel proud and happy to have flown in the Queen of the Skies.
747 still flies across the world ,may not fly passengers but it still grace the sky with its beauty ,this clip should be titled the indelible life of 'The queen of the sky"
I don't care about other passenger airliner planes, this is the best one ever. The first memory I have of it was back in 1984, I was 4, the flight was Milan (Malpensa) - Bangkok Thai Airways. When I saw it from outside before embarking I was mesmerized, astonished, it was massive, magic! I remember my father telling me "this is the Boing 747 Jumbo Jet!", such a cool memory! I still can't believe it's gonna be retired. I'll miss this plane.
It’s sad that the 747 is not in production but edventualy all planes reach an era where they can’t dominate the market, but the engineering of the plane means that they still are amazing cargo aircraft
I’m not really an aviation geek but can appreciate the 747 for its distinctive design. I also happened to have gotten randomly assigned a license plate that ends in “00747,” and I took the chance to take a picture of my car (license in view) with the 747 prototype (at the Museum of Flight in Seattle) in the background. I get giddy looking at that picture.
nothing will ever match the emotion that the 747 can instill , from her looks, size , technology and longevity its an absolute marvel of aviation ....nothing will ever come close to it
*_#FORMER_BOEING_EVERETT_**_ _**_#Lean_Manufacturing_* I have been up close and personal with the 747 starting with a pile of very expensive parts then all the way to Final Certification. It truly is a 'Jumbo Jet' aka Queen of the Skies. When Boeing got first orders for B747 from Pan Am, there was no place big enough to build it. Not only did Boeing have a year to deliver first plane, it had to also build a gigantic factory. The factory wasn't even weather tight when production was in full swing on first couple of 747's. Boeing bought 750 acres of forest. Trees were cut, land was leveled, and thousands of construction workers started building the initial factory (small by today's giant), and other support buildings. The mechanics building the plane in these harsh conditions and very short timeline were nicknamed 'The Incredibles'. They also built a complete rail spur, highways and roads, all in record time. Today Boeing builds biggest aircraft inside biggest factory, by best workforce in the industry. In all 5 different wide body twin aisle aircraft are built at Boeing Everett; 747, 757, 767, 777, and 787. Soon the 797 will start production. Today Boeing Everett covers over 1,000 acres, is largest factory in world, and it is going through another shift in airline economics. The market has changed and the 777 and 787 are the most popular aircraft for range, capacity, and reduced costs compared to the 747. Airbus learned the hard way with their A380. We proposed a supersized 747, not a brand new super Jumbo. A380 got the sales, we didn't care because we already had 777 and 787 was coming soon. *_On the plus side, existing 747's in both passenger and freight configurations will be around for decades to come._*
As an employee of Boeing for 15 years, I've had the pleasure of working on the 747 in Everett and seeing it every day. Beautiful bird. Last one just rolled out a few weeks ago. Sad to see
I'm a Proud Incredible. Part of the Multiple Award Winning 747 E-4440 final assembly crew, that went 2 1/2 years on a 3 day cycle, at 100%. Not a single traveler in all that time. We could have done it in 2 days 🤗 But we were pretty much 100% all the time. It was Fun !!! Best Aircraft Ever. ...no bias 😏
I had the pleasure to fly on one twice, once to Madrid and once back again. I'll never forget how in Montreal at Mirabel airport, we were herded onto these four unique buses with elevating hydraulics that went to the 747 and loaded us on. The plane was parked quite far from the terminal. It was quite efficient. What a vacation, Grease the Movie played on the transatlantic crossing, 1980. Ah, those were the days, then from Madrid on to Tenerife for a month-long vacation. I never did anything that exotic again.
My father was an A&P Mechanic for TWA at Lambert Intl. In St. Louis 1958-1983. I loved airplanes and flying. The first deliveries of this jet in 1970 were nicknamed "Fat Albert"
I was at London Heathrow Airport (LHR) the day the first 747 arrived. Awesome. I later worked for Singapore Airlines (SQ) for 8 years at LHR and my heart was always pumping when I saw our SQ 747 take off. Bootiful aircraft and the real Queen of the Skys.
Back in the late 60's, my grandfather was an engineer at Boeing. He was so proud of being a part of the 747 development team. He used to tell me stories about certain tests that the 747 had to go through. For example, he told me about the wing flex testing as well as measuring heat buildup in the brakes during a hard stop. He was especially proud of the design of the landing gear. He and my grandma lived on Whidbey Island. They had a small ranch there with a few cows. He built a go-cart for us to drive around the property. It was powered by a chainsaw motor. Whenever something broke, he would stay up late at night and re-engineer it so the go-cart would be ready to go the next morning.
I've flown on more types of aircraft than I can remember. The 747 was exceptional for its time. The quietness, cabin air quality of the newer 787/777 and A350 are similar leaps forward in technology but I wonder if they will have the opportunity to have such a long service life. I'm still happy when a flight is subbed out for an older 767/A340, reminds me of simpler times. The 727 still evokes the strongest memories of any aircraft, the sheer amount of noise on takeoff made you feel like the plane was going to rip the sky apart.. probably doesn't even have a 10th of the power of new planes but they are so much more refined you don't even notice the power.
I worked on UALs 747-100,SP, 200 and mostly the 400. The best experience was flying in first class in 1A or 2A. As you sped down the runway the windows were angled inside to the nose of the Airplane. You had a somewhat forward view of the speed and takeoff. I’m a private pilot and I’ll tell you that’s the most fun I’ve ever had with my clothes on! And the 2nd most amazing experience, I was the flight Mechanic flying charters to Kuwait during the Iraq war. Sitting behind the pilots they pointed out the Northern lights above Canada on the way to Germany, I felt like I could reach out and touch them. And that same trip From Frankfurt to Kuwait we flew over the Pyramids in Egypt, a full moon and some broken clouds allowed us to see them lit up over the desert. Fantastic! And the last experience was sitting behind the Captain as we landed in Frankfurt, to be in the upper deck during the flare and landing I’ll never forget it. So glad to hear everyone’s experience’s, it will always be the Queen to us!
Such a beauty. My favorite of all time is still the L-1011 but I will always remember my trips out of JFK with my mom as a kid on TWA 747s. Magical experiences.
My first flight to Paris was on a 747. It was so huge and comfortable. I consider myself a little bit fortunate to have experienced it, even if it was coach fare.
I recall Pres. Clinton visited my town back in the 90s. We don't get many 747s here. Me and some friends were outside to see Air Force One fly over our small-ish town, and it was the largest object I've ever seen in the skies above my town. It was an absolutely awe-inspiring site. I hate to see the Queen Of The Skies go away. It's a beautiful plane and it's "America's Plane." It's an ambassador, symbolizing our country's greatness and pride wherever it goes. I'm hanging my hopes for a future 747, in some form, on an admittedly unlikely project, although not completely impossible. There exists as a concept a refit _twin engine_ 747, with two modern, powerful, & efficient engines. And the weight would presumably be reduced with modern materials for the airframe and outer skin such as carbon fiber. I heard about this in another TH-cam video, and I'm not sure how many grains of salt should be taken with that. Lol But I'd love to see it happen.
747 my first air travel experience....back in 1982 .just cant forget. fell in love. sad to see its end. thats life. one guy Manu Chabria, who flew first time to Dubai from Mumbai in this aircraft in 1970s was was so much impressed that he named his small shop as Jumbo Electronics...which ultimately became the biggest electronic business and multi business in middle East. my salute to the team and American spirit doing impossible possible.
I remember the introduction of the 747. I first flew on one in about 1973. It had a piano bar upstairs. I was 14. I kept saying to my parents as we went down the runway “It will never get off the ground.” It was unbelievably huge compared to everything else at the airport. It was an unforgettable experience.
Even though most people have seen a 747, people will still take pictures as we taxi into a lot of airports around the world... I doubt many pilots have that same experience! She's iconic.
Heyyyy you must be a pilot! wheres your avaitors Kels?
i almost didnt realise your status mate! Will you ever fly into Brisbane? Id love to wave to you as you land mate!
I still love seeing it, it looks so gorgeous, though I only flew on one once as a child. These days transatlantic are using 2 engine long distance ones. I am jealous you get to the fly it
You are a fortunate man to be privileged with flying such a magnificent bird!
Kels, you ever go to Honolulu?
Hi K .... Can you please do a Hollywood Vs Reality on the movies ... Airport and Airport 1975 ? I have been asking you for years to do this with no answer from you . Thanks
I wouldn't call this a "rise and fall" ... the Queen of the Skies reigned for over 60 years, that's an impressive amount of time with hundreds built! So it is quite the success story!
100% a success, all of them performed their intended goals for their eras
Yes, more like retirement, not fall.
@Bongani Tshabalala the A380 you mean?
@@mikezerker6925the a380 just came out and is already being retired
A380 is a 'Rise and Fall' story.
To attempt to apply that to the 747 is nothing short of clickbait.
The story of the 747 is 'The Icon that Changed the World'.
And one excellent measure of how iconic something is would be to highlight its cultural impact. Look at all the Hollywood movies which used the 747 as the leading character. You don't see movies where the star is, say, an Airbus. I'm not aware of a single one. There must be at least one, yet nothing comes to mind. Nor, for that matter, any movie centered on a 787. Nor a 777. Nor a 737. Etc. If anyone did it, it wasn't memorable. Not to me.
The 747 was and is a star. It deserves a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. It is that iconic. You cannot say this for any other airliner. And almost no other aircraft. When it comes to all vehicles which were ever made, the only other one that comes to mind as being a cultural icon of similar magnitude would be the VW Bug.
So maybe the hump is the key to making a beautiful design that no one can forget.
When it comes to the 747, the story is:
'The Rise, and Rise, and Rise of the 747 ...and eventual graceful fade half a century later.'
The Concorde had a rise and a fall. The 747 had a glorious career!
The Concorde didn't fall,it was killed.
@@denisbegaj5970 how so?
@@lordsiomai it was ahead of it s time
@@lordsiomaitoo expensive, which meant not enough people would be able to afford the fares for them to justify the other issues. Can it be feasibly done now? I don't know.
That is an absurd statement. And the 747 certainly had its falls too. The Concorde was in a different league. It's like comparing a Ferrari to a Cadillac or a Jaguar.
Aw, an icon finally takes a bow and goes down to into history. Legandary as she is, she will never be forgotten, her shape, her size and her service through billion of passengers that she carried all this years. Thank you.
Magical aircraft. My late dad flew her with German Cargo on his last assignment and was in his element in the cockpit. I can still vividly remember him taking me to Chicago on a 74. All the way across the Atlantic. Just me, dad and his two fellow crewmen...imagine that...
That’s an awesome memory to have!
Yes Mike, it was. Incredible.
Lucky you
What was the purpose of that flight?
Beautiful!
My uncle was the facility maintence supervisor for northwest airlines at one time. He took me into the hanger in Duluth, MN, and they had been restoring two 747’s. They had the glass cockpit installed but the fuselage was an empty shell. Got to sit in the pilots seat and fondle anything I wanted in that plane. It was incredible. Uncle threw me up inside one of the engines and we took a picture together inside the jet engine. Still have it framed 30 years later.
Wow, that's really cool 😌
Fondle?
Great story. I love the 47. The last time I flew on one was when I flew back from Australia. It is hard to believe any plane can fly from Sydney to San Francisco nonstop. But the 747 could.
Uncle Hershel's soap 🧼
@@pooryorick831 If you find that hard to believe, there are planes now that are flying from Houston to Sydney nonstop. Over 1000 miles further than the distance from Sydney - SF!
Best plane ever built. My father flew for Pan Am for 37 years. He loved his job and loved the 747. Thanks great tribute. Glad they mentioned PanAm that's why we had the 707 and 747.
I’m a bit sad that in 1977 that the 2nd ever built 747. More specifically the Boeing 747-100 registered N747PA. Flying as Pan Am 1736 Was involved in an accident with KLM 4805 another Boeing 747 specifically the 747-200. I’m unsure about the registration but definitely under Dutch registration.
Both planes were a write off. I’m likely aware you may know this accident but I thought I would mention it.
I never flew Pan Am and I miss it.
not sure what you mean by "best", if you consider environmental impact, cost efficiency, range and capacity, it has got to be the a350
You might want to read the comment I just posted, disparaging Pan Am's dismal service.
The plane was great. But Pan Am's service was terrible.
@@gregparrott If Pan American World Airways service was ‘dismal’ as you state , then why have todays best international carriers Emirates , Qatar , Singapore Airlines modeled themselves on the “Worlds Greatest Airline” R.E.G. Davies ??
Yup, I was a 74 captain for 25 years, all models. I can’t help but think almost each day how lucky I have been to fly all around the world with the Queen of the Skies. She was elegant, sturdy, safe and fast and oh boy, she could deliver an inner sense of pride and accomplishment !
She ain’t done yet.
Lies again? FNB Money Bus Driver
Safe?🗿💀
including the 747SP?
Problem is Speed .Neo is Slower than 30 years ago
I am a retired LA City employee after 36 years of service. I worked as a gardener for LA city near LAX. I first saw a Continental Airlines 747 in 1970 taking off from LAX. I just stood in awe as SHE was "getting out of dodge" if you know what I I mean. Then in 1979, I flew on a PAN AM 747 from LAX to New York JFK. Maaaan, she was huge and during the flight I was ALL over HER and I could not stay seated. None of the flight attendants was on me about keeping my seat. I had never been on anything so huge and so beautiful. And with as many of other passenger jets I have flown on(mostly all of them), that flight on the PAN AM is my most memorable one. Times change and it really breaks my heart to see HER leave us. She WILL forever be the QUEEN OF THE SKIES. I sit here @ my computer for hours and hours watching the videos of the 747 taking off and landing and continuing to move passengers to and fro. Thank You Mr. Boeing. Keep building the best planes.
I was a 747-400 pilot from 2008-2013…the best airplane I’ve ever flown with regards to performance, and hands down, the best looking airplane ever designed!
I have flown over 3 million miles on a 747 going back to the early 80's. Mainly the USA and Asia, Europe, Australia. The irony is that my first job out of college was working in the 747 factory in Everett 2 years before my first 747 flight. I've flown on almost every version including a combi and an SP. I've flown in every class including the upper deck which was my favorite. Thank you Boeing 747,
There was a SP in Hamilton. It was flown to Arizona to its new owner and to be fixed up. Wonder if that thing is still around.
What is an SP?
@@gert-janbonnema Special Performance. It was shortened and could go further without refuelling. But it carried a lot fewer passengers.
You are high rolla😎
Try not to begin every sentence wth "I"
I retired in 2016. I flew several iterations of the 747 twenty two years. I loved every minute of it.
did you fly the A380 too?
@@spezi_korn2019 No.
I can barely drive a car, let alone a plane! Lol Much respect for you and the services you provided! :)
do you know the name of the airline at 17:00 the one between ana and asiana?
@@vesko0325 Mandarin Airlines
I have flown on the 747 numerous times. When I was active duty military, the charter airlines would sometimes deploy these for overseas flights from the US. I felt like I was riding a ship in the sky. My best experience was on an Air France 747-400 from Atlanta to Paris. Besides the awesome service, the aircraft felt like butter in the air. It is such a beautiful aircraft!!! I've worked on National and Atlas cargo 747s for years. Highly efficient jets. Definitely gonna miss flying them.
Thank you for your service. I too have flown in this beautiful jet many times, as civilian , but would have loved a chance to fly on one of those charters!
Hi there, I need to learn from you🥺
I concur with you, from my limited experience a 747-400 did feel like a ship. Always very smooth.
You said on another video that you work at McDonald's, ranting about minimum wage. Which is it?
@@igisanchez265 yeah. Wrong guy, buddy! Lol!!!!
747 is legend. Planes will come and go but 747 will forever remain most iconic plane ever built.
This is about "Evolution of the Market," not a "Fall" of the B747. She served her purpose and helped usher in the age we are now if even if she precepted her own obsolescence. Loved flying the 747 - especially the -400 and, more recently, the -8. Always a fantastic ride.
She fell bro she’s obsolete thats how it works grandpa
She fell bro she’s obsolete thats how it works grandpa
I remember when this plane came out when I was a kid. It STILL is the most beautiful plane out there. I was glad I got to fly on one by accident because another flight got cancelled.
by luck
When I was a kid in the early 80s, my dad who worked for the DOD took me to see the Space shuttle Columbia while it was mounted on top of a 747. It was parked on a tarmac away from the passenger jets outside of the Lambert airport in St. Louis, where fighter jets were parked and maintained, etc. With his DOD badge, we sped by the military guard and drove right up to the 747. As we got of our '78 Mercury, I remember how excited my dad and I were to see the space shuttle in person, but as I began to walk underneath the 747 I became more interested in the plane. I was amazed by how huge this plane was. The landing gear was massive, with tires taller than me and engines that looked as big as a car. Forty plus years later I still remember this like it was yesterday. What an era and experience to remember. No way this would be possible in today's time. Going to miss seeing this beautiful work of flying art... Thanks for the memories, Dad! Miss ya! RIP
your dad is up in heaven where that airplane still flies, its a miracle he gets to laugh at all the crazy antics and whispers in a pasenger brain "come fly with me"
My first trip on an airplane was in 1979. I flew out to LAX from JFK with my grandma and the flight out to LAX was a 747. I remember looking out the window at the gate in awe of that jet. I also remember walking past the spiral stair case on my way to the coach section of the plane. I got to fly on the 747 quite a few times as an adult but I will never forget the first time I got to fly on that plane.
I still remember my first 747 flight. South African Airways from Johannesburg to London Heathrow. I was an unaccompanied minor, flying to visit the UK at the age of 7. I was in awe of the double isles, how long the wings were and how smooth the plane was. I flew this route many times over, but never got over that initial fascination when I stepped on the 747 for the first time. What a lucky experience!
I was a kid when this aircraft was introduced and was lucky to see it take off and land throughout the day when the pilots did actual manual training before sim was available . Never got tired of it. I've seen it up close while it was parking and it was like a giant bearing down . In the air at more than 30k feet going to London it was smooth as silk and touchdown was a caress. It is more like an emperor with the sky its realm. Certainly wrong to term it a fall; more like a gradual phase out . Long live !
A similar experience could be had at Shannon Airport where 747 aircrew would practice take offs and landings in comfort because Shannon is not too busy at the present time. The National flag carrier, Aer Lingus, no longer flies the 747 because it is more economical to fly twins, mostly from Dublin to the US. Shannon only has a very limited service now since the government mandated stop-over was got rid of. I was lucky to have at least 8 flights in this type and enjoyed every minute of those flights.
I flew 747s several times when living in Hawaii and flying to the East Coast. Take offs were smooth and powerful - impossible to lift my head from rest until it had climbed in altitude. Landings were smooth. Their were bars throughout the plane where (and when) passengers could stand and chat with others. Unlike today's flights, seats were comfortable and plenty of legroom. Food was delicious and free! First Class was "upstairs". I miss the glory of 747s...nothing like it since.
I wish I could have flown it. But it probably would have costed so much and I didn’t know about it at the time
@@nhjhbvfggfvcf8508 it was regular fare and didn't cost any more than other airlines.
@@musicinggp Dayum
@@nhjhbvfggfvcf8508 you still can. worth saving up for and taking a trip on one. I know I will, in the coming years.
It isnt "free food" you dummy, you paid to be on the plane.
When I took my first European trip I was excited to see it was a 747. Such a iconic plane I always wanted to travel on.
My grandparents would always fly Lufthansa when they lived in Germany. From what they told me they had a great fleet of 747s
@@penskepc2374 Still do.
The 747 is an icon. The queen of the skies. She’ll always have a special place in our hearts as plane enthusiasts. The 747 blazed a path for the next generation of wide-body aircraft to innovate. I’m excited and interested to see what Airbus and Boeing will do in my lifetime, especially with COMAC entering the market.
Exactly the 747 Connected Australia, (my country) with the world. The 747 is essentially the penultimate toyota landcruiser of the sky, she was built and is still improved on until im guessing the very last one graces our skies. Shes a lot noisier than say the new dreamliner, but if i ahd a choice id go 747 over a dreamliner anyday.
@@Steve211Ucdhihifvshi - penultimate means second to last. What to YOU believe it means?
The 747 is the most beautiful commercial aircraft ever designed. They really do define the skies. It is great to see them in use as freighters today and hopefully decades to come.
Nope never
I remember as a child flying on 747s during family vacations. The comfy seats and real soft landings. Definitely a far cry from today's airline experiences.
My first international flight from South Africa to New York was on a 747 when I was just 7 years old. One of the fondest memories of my childhood. I was so amazed at the sheer size of her and that iconic hump. I remember wishing me and my sister would sit on the top deck, didn't understand the differences in classes. She's truly the queen of the skies❤❤
My Dad was a Manager at United in the 70's and 80's. We flew on the 747 at least 5 times! It was an epic event each time!
My first time flying the upper deck was something I never have forgotten… after dozens of journeys across the Atlantic and Pacific from the 747-100 to the 747-400 I’ll never forget the magical experience that came with it, I’ll surely miss her.
She'll be in operation for decades to come, so probably don't need to miss her just yet.
Power, style, function: the 747 will always be Queen of the Skies !
Others may be bigger, but no plane can equal the legendary 747.
I'm crushed that the last 747 has left the building.
PETITION BOEING TO KEEP MAKING THESE PLEASE !
I recall as a child watching the very 1st 747 do its madden test flight on television. I heard the loud sound of its jet engines; I ran outside and looked up as she flew over our house at low altitude, my gosh id never seen anything so large in the skys before. I fell in love with that aircraft at that moment!
I was 3 and half when my family and I immigrated from India to the USA, it was on a 747. I remember it being big. This was in 1974. It will always hold a special place in my heart.
USA > India
🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
me too, from europe. i was 7. our seats were broken and the only extra seats were upstairs first class. best flight ever! and we had nothing at the time.
In '73 I flew United from JFK to SFO, I made reservations on the flight just because it was scheduled to go as a 747. It was a repositioning flight for the airplane, there weren't more than 30 passengers on board. The flight crew was so accommodating, I got to tour the entire aircraft during our flight. It was a grand experience of one grand aircraft.
I had the same experience, in the opposite direction: SFO ->JFK, a TWA red-eye flight with more crew than passengers. We all gathered at the bar and had a great time - I'm sure the attendants, who were delighted to have no workload to speak of, broke more than a few rules on that flight. They enjoyed an enviable lifestyle (from my 23-year-old point of view) in the mid-'70s.
I do envy you Sir.
It's an aircraft you have to see in person to fully understand just how massive and beautiful it is. Sad to hear this news of no more production.
Planes come and go. Technology keeps changing. More and more airlines are moving towards twin engine planes. Even Airbus had this problem with the gorgeous A340. I was glad to fly one of those before the A330 rendered it obsolete overnight. Soon airlines were canceling their orders and asking Airbus to make more A330s as well as the A300NEO.
According to some aviation business analysts, the A300NEO may have been the catalyst that led to the LionAir tragedy. Boeing was in panic mode when the NEO got its first customer so they rushed out a modified 737 with much larger engines and called it the 737MAX. They didn't bother telling the customers that the plane had a deadly flaw in its software called MCAS. This was blamed on not one but TWO crashes that tragically killed all aboard and led to a massive investigation which led to Boeing's reputation being permanently stained. It was so controversial that the suffix MAX isn't even used on new Boeing planes any more because hearing it angers people so much. Just tragic. I still cannot believe how many lives were lost because of one tiny flaw in the software...
I honestly haven't seen one in like 20 years. But I think a new twin-engine concept can work today. Nothing beats its freight capability, military and civil.
747 to me represents the brilliant minds and leadership that made her into existence, power of human ingenuity and creativity
I went to Germany from Minneapolis on a 747. I specifically remember taking off and watching the plane's wing starting to lift as we were taxing down the runway an thinking Ok, at any moment the rest of the plane should follow suit. It quickly did. It was the best quality flight the entire way.
Wonderful memory! I used to fly out of Minneapolis to Tokyo and back on the 747 every summer as a child. Sometimes in both the lower and upper deck First Class thanks to a family friend who worked at NWA at the time. Fabulous experience and memories. The most memorable probably being flying right through a typhoon out to Tokyo and being in the lower first class, right at the nose. I certainly miss seeing the regular NWA/Delta 747's at MSP, but we still get regular UPS 747 freighters coming in :-)
Sounds like a Northwest flight.
To an ordinary flier, I am proud to say that I flown once from Manila to Davao via Philippine Airlines in 2012. And the experienced was superb, I haven't feel any turbulence during the entire flight. It was fantastic! The sad thing, when I came back to Manila - the Davao to Manila flight operated by A321 aircraft. But I was grateful to experienced it.
It was probably in 2012 that I also flew Manila to Davao.
Funny thing was I just walked into the ticket office at NAIA and asked what flights would cost to various places. They had a Manila/Davao flight for 1000p leaving in 2 hours so I booked it.
Much to my surprise, it was a 747 (I was accustomed to much smaller planes when flying domestic in the Philippines).
To my greater surprise, I was seated in the top level business section.
I think the flight was only 90 minutes and that was the worst part of the experience…we had to land…I wished I could have spent many more hours in that seat.
I dont think the 747 failed in these modern times
It paved the way to our airline industry. Its contributions alone outweigh its shortcomings. So yeah this plane will forever be the queen of the skies
Rode on this beauty in the business class. Most comfortable flight. Narita to Hong Kong. Service was excellent. Luxoury class. A sheer joy to ride. FOUR ENGINES ARE FOR ME. Felt very safe. Bring it back.
My most memorable 747 flight was from Montreal to Amsterdam. There was a bad thunderstorm in Montreal and we were one hour late on our departure. The flight attendants were adamant that we would not put anything other than just overcoats or other soft items in the overhead storage. People were unhappy about all the luggage that had to go under the seats, occupying all the accustomed foot space. But what else could we do. Like said, the crew was adamant. So, we took off and my seat was far back, where the plane started getting narrow. In fact, I had a straight view along the right isle all the way to the very front. And then it happened, we flew right through the remainder of the storm. Looking at the isle, I saw what felt like 15 degree twist left and right. Probably it was less -- I said it felt like that much. Anyway, about half of the overhead storage doors popped open and the coats dropped down. I think not many passengers were unhappy any more that there were no hard pieces of luggage up there. Well, the frightening experience lasted some 5 or 10 minutes. And the rest of the flight was smooth. But I keep my memory of the big 747 twisting that way.
I also made a trip in a 747 from Montreal to Vancouver, it was before september 2001 and I got to spend about half an hour in the cockpit with the pilots and had the best view over the snowy peaks of the rockies, the windows allow you to see below you, just breathtaking
Good story
@@George.Andrews. - ...and well told! 😀
Sometimes will happen we don’t expect by
😢very much but we all need the toilet and right behind the cockpit we have a toilet I needed the toilet and then we got in a air hole so long time that I was thinking we don’t stop before we are all the way down we dropped 800 meters free fall i stud and got almost airborne in the toilet and when we got air again over the wings and I went out and I had never seen anything like that all coffee ☕️ cups and food was all over top sealing and passenger was chock 😅
The end for now, however but how much does a boing with full fuel ⛽️ and cargo and 400 passengers 200000 liters is filled In Copenhagen and with 1012 millibar truly and we can fill 200 tons fuel in danmark but when we need to take of in Bank convoluted can we only have 180,000 liters why?because we normally have 1012 bar to press down the fuel ⛽️ but in bk the weather doesn’t have so much pressure like maybe 8010 bar pressure so we can’t have more fuel and the distance must we safe on the home flight ✈️ 😊
My cousin was a 747 pilot for Delta. On his retirement flight, he flew Delta's last 747 which was retired after that flight.
So did he get to keep the plane?
@@pushslice I cant tell if you are joking or serious
@@pushslice he kept both wings
I flew that aircraft from the beginning at Pan Am then again at DeltaI took the first Delta 747 to Tokyo after so many years. It was like riding a bicycle..you never forget.. I loved that airplane❤ Valerie Matei
We all got pieces of the plane cut to look like puzzle pieces…pretty cool
I remember seeing a 747 for the first time at Heathrow airport London , I was flying Pan am to Hong Kong , the first thing to appear was the rear tail fin behind a building like a shark fin in the sea , then the nose appeared ..it was magnificent just amazing, my first thought after being seated was how it would get off the ground , I looked around and thought you could play football inside here..such a smooth plane... A 747 was just a special plane .
indeed
I am so grateful to have ridden this beauty. When I was little between the years 2002- until about 2010, we went from Sweden to Bangkok in a 747 every year. The last time I went on it was in 2020 (probably the last time :(.... Then it was a 747a extra inserted between bangkok-Phuket, I called up upgraded to Business class immediately I saw it was a 747a. An old beautiful classic plane a this once. Rest in peace
I'm a Proud Incredible.
Part of the Multiple Award Winning 747 E-4440 final assembly crew, that went 2 1/2 years on a 3 day cycle, at 100%. Not a single traveler in all that time. We could have done it in 2 days 🤗 But we were pretty much 100% all the time. It was Fun !!!
Best Aircraft Ever. ...no bias 😏
When I graduated as an engineer in 1996, my first job was with Boeing. My first flight on the 747 was from London to Los Angeles at the hump. What a beauty. At the time, British Airways still preserved a high level of service, which made the experience delightful.
My first flight on a 47 was in 1970 with Japan Air lines from San Francisco to Tokyo. The attention to detail back then was unimaginable in todays world. I felt like royalty. Now I would rather take the Greyhound than an airplane. LOL I spent over 50 years in the aviation industry, and the aircraft I loved to fly in most were the DC-3, The 707. and the 747. Three of the most iconic aircraft in aviation history.
@@Dave-ty2qp Above all, it has always been a symbol of American inventiveness and business savviness. As to the service, my experience was good, but I am sure you experienced it at its apex.
The rise and fall? She may have finally gone out of production, but the Queen never fell. She had but one actual competitor (the A380) and watched her come and go. The A380s will be long retired when the last 747 makes its final flight decades from now. Even then she will live on as one of the legendary aircraft of all times. Long live the Queen.
Correct!
747-8 didn't sell, that's the fall
Should be the legacy of the 747 Queen of the skies
Don't think so. If you think the A380 will be retire first and then747 will continue, I must say it's more of an American poverty than the t4uth.
My father was a Flight Engineer for the 747 for 36 years. There's a small bunk bed in there for staff to sleep in for long hauls. I've sat in the cockpit over a few dozen times during take offs and landings.
Ohh you scared me, I thought you meant you slept in the cockpit
Sometimes during the 80s or 90s, my wife, our two sons, and I flew non-stop from NYC La Guardia to Zurich, Switzerland, and back. Our plane was a special 747 that was shorter than the usual ones and was designed for non-stop service to very far away destinations. Best of all, it was free !! Holiday Inns had a point system that rewarded you for 100 points determined by the number of days you stayed in an HI. A flaw in the system was exploited by yours truly, a frequent flyer. One point for one night; two points for three nights. OR, THREE points for THREE nights if you changed hotels. It was inconvenient, but I was determined. Your reward was a free hotel AND air flights for 2 anywhere in the world there was an HI. SO, we chose Switzerland. What an awesome memory.. Thank you Holiday Inns, and Budget Rent a Car who provided the free rental car. We traveled, by car, all over Switzerland according to a map marked out for us by the Hotel Manager every morning. We went to parts of the country where they had never seen tourists. They could not speak English, not could we speak any of their languages. There was a lot of pointing and gestures but we always had dinner, and we always found our way back to Zurich. We extended our stay for 9 days and really enjoyed ourselves.
I have flown on the 747 once in my life, way back in 1978 with Air India from London Heathrow to JFK, and to this day, it's still my favorite plane ever!!!
A timely doco'. Thank you folks for the snapshot history. I have only flown on the 747 a couple of times during my 72 years, but - among the thousands watching this looming giant approach Auckland airport on its inaugural flight to New Zealand to a perfect touchdown in just a few hundred metres was astounding! It is imprinted on my memory for ever.
In 1975 I flew in a 747 from San Francisco to Oahu. Nothing compared to it. It was like a huge butterfly in the sky. Unfortunately for United Airlines it was less then half full. Talking with a stewardess the flight only made money because of the added cargo it was able to carry. The 747 consumed 500 gallons of fuel per hour according to the stewardess. When it touched down I could see but not feel it landing. Smooth is the best word to describe the jet on take-off, flight, and landing.
try more like 4,500 gallons per hour
I also flew the same route on a 747 in 1975 - I was 6 years old. Still thought it was cool to be on a plane like that.
As someone born in the 1970s, the Boeing 747-400 represented the apex of all the airplanes that I know of. The model name comes naturally with an impression of importance, grandeur, and safety. Somehow I felt more relaxed if I was in a 747-400. Kind sentimental to see it’s becoming part of the passing history too.
right? because we were introduced to the world of 'big planes" through the 747, all the movies the stories are 747, and it was THE plane to carry heavy things, like the Space shuttle.
yeah, remember 747 non-stop flight from nz to hk, as kid.
It's the most iconic plane of all time for sure. Just beautiful.
As a recent retired flight attendant I always loved flying on many 747 planes ✈️ they were so iconic and the pilots were so professional they could land them like glass I miss flying on them
Flown on every Boeing aircraft class and the 747 is by far my favorite! Beautiful aircraft and will always be the Queen of the skies.
My first international flight was in 1992 on a Qantas 747 bound for LA. I was upgraded to business class and sat up in the hump, it opened up the world to me
A classic, just such a classic -- as you wait anywhere for a flight, you are always looking around and keeping your eyes open just to see this amazing plane.
I flew the 747 since infancy while traveling to Hong Kong. It was always a given that I'll be on a 747. But in 2001, a new 777-200 from Continental flew me to Tokyo from IAH Houston and I was so impressed that a 2 engine jet could do the 747's job. I was impressed but at the same time a little sad that the trusty 747 that's always been synonymous with long haul travel was now losing its glory, 22 years ago. I was thinking to myself then that the 747 is quickly becoming an outdated aircraft as much I loved it. Going forward after my first 777 flight in 2001 I was able to catch a few 747-400s, which I thought then would last for many years to come but, sadly less than a decade after those flights, the 747-400s were quickly being replaced by many airlines. My last ever 747 flight was on a United 747-400 from SFO-HKG in late 2016. It was time I wished could last a little more longer. Now as of 2023, I don't think I'll ever catch a 747 again. Well, if there any airlines or even freighters that are flying the 747 for "decades to come" I'd hope every 747 owner would completely retire the airplane on its 100th anniversary since its first flight on February 9, 2069! That would be the GREATEST 747 farewell ever!
Retirement at 100 would be epic! Another aircraft that may actually reach that milestone is the B-52
Travel on Lufthansa if you want to catch a 747. From LAX, Chicago, Houston.
I fly the 74-8 for a cargo operator and I have many hours starting in the odd ball 74-1 and the 74-2 and the 74-4. It has been a very safe air frame for myself to make a living since 1992. The airline business has had many ups and downs but I feel like a survivor and the govt. will clip my wings long before the last 74 leaves the sky
I made a 13-hr flight from San Francisco to Tokyo on a JAL 747 in 1983. I had flown back to the States on a C-5, accompanied by 40 drunk Marines, so my pregnant self was very appreciative of the space and whisper-smooth ride of the Queen of the Skies.
I started my career as an Air traffic controller in control tower at Karachi International Airport . Those days Clipper 1 & 2 were flying all around the world. B747 had the Majestic takeover and landing . It could land using short part of runway. Even in case of immediate takeoff the aircraft was borne before our estimation. I still missed those graceful takeoff and majestic landing. It is life . New innovation takes place .
Now I am a retired aeronautical engineer.
I have flown with the B-747 five times. First time in 1987, and last time in 1993. All were smooth flights. My favourite aircraft of all time.
i flew on british airways on a 747 in december of 2019 mainly so i could fly on one before they were phased out, little did i know about covid which would put them out almost right after :( they’re such amazing planes
As soon as they started with that Covid nonsense I knew BA would phase them out almost immediately and they did. They had 31 in service when they scrapped them. Outrageous.
There is no "fall" of the 747, she is and will always be the Queen of the skies.
I saw the very 1st 747 flight and still remember it for it being so big. Forward 10 years and I was an engineer for the 747. It was interesting to look through all the different studies that had been done on how to vary it’s design for different uses.
Definitely a pioneer not only in aviation but also in the way it changed our lives. The 747 was able to take us to places around the world that we only could have dreamed of a century ago. It also helped to develop a global economy with its ability to carry large amounts of cargo. Whenever you set foot in a 747, it inspired confidence in your flight. It's definitely the end of an era with its retirement but hopefully the lessons it taught us will inspire us to greater an ever greater successor.
What still amazes me is that it's the only airplane able to put cities, airlines, and airports on the map. It raised the profile of every place and everything it went to.
An accomplished jet like the 747 can never fall, it has simply served its purpose and now the next generation of aircraft can take over from where it has left off.
Its funny to think, that most if not all carriers alive today made their bread and butter off the back of this queen of the skies. Fact remains, theres still a lot of countries like australia where flying a giant bus packed with people is more economical than running two and a half dreamliners, but meh Im not a airline ceo grub. hahaha
The purpose of the 747, to bring affordable but luxurious air travel, has been retired. The 747 is still the best aircraft for this role, but the role doesn't exist in the modern day of selling less tickets at higher prices. Aviation is regressing to the days of the 707 and DC-8, smaller aircraft with longer ranges.
My first flight from Delhi to Mumbai back in 2012 was in in an Air India 747. At that time I didnt knew what the aircraft was, but now I know and I feel proud and happy to have flown in the Queen of the Skies.
My first flight in a 747 was also with air India, probably in 96 or 97. I remember being in awe of the sheer size of the aircraft.
747 still flies across the world ,may not fly passengers but it still grace the sky with its beauty ,this clip should be titled the indelible life of 'The queen of the sky"
I don't care about other passenger airliner planes, this is the best one ever.
The first memory I have of it was back in 1984, I was 4, the flight was Milan (Malpensa) - Bangkok Thai Airways. When I saw it from outside before embarking I was mesmerized, astonished, it was massive, magic!
I remember my father telling me "this is the Boing 747 Jumbo Jet!", such a cool memory!
I still can't believe it's gonna be retired.
I'll miss this plane.
Amazing airplane deserves to be on display for all eternity. What a peice of history.
It’s sad that the 747 is not in production but edventualy all planes reach an era where they can’t dominate the market, but the engineering of the plane means that they still are amazing cargo aircraft
I’m not really an aviation geek but can appreciate the 747 for its distinctive design. I also happened to have gotten randomly assigned a license plate that ends in “00747,” and I took the chance to take a picture of my car (license in view) with the 747 prototype (at the Museum of Flight in Seattle) in the background. I get giddy looking at that picture.
You should become an aviation geek
She will always be the Queen of the skies.Such an iconic aircraft might be succeeded,but never replaced (in our harts,at least)...
747 & 380 is the king of the skies... Best plane ever engineered
nothing will ever match the emotion that the 747 can instill , from her looks, size , technology and longevity its an absolute marvel of aviation ....nothing will ever come close to it
*_#FORMER_BOEING_EVERETT_**_ _**_#Lean_Manufacturing_*
I have been up close and personal with the 747 starting with a pile of very expensive parts then all the way to Final Certification. It truly is a 'Jumbo Jet' aka Queen of the Skies. When Boeing got first orders for B747 from Pan Am, there was no place big enough to build it. Not only did Boeing have a year to deliver first plane, it had to also build a gigantic factory. The factory wasn't even weather tight when production was in full swing on first couple of 747's.
Boeing bought 750 acres of forest. Trees were cut, land was leveled, and thousands of construction workers started building the initial factory (small by today's giant), and other support buildings. The mechanics building the plane in these harsh conditions and very short timeline were nicknamed 'The Incredibles'. They also built a complete rail spur, highways and roads, all in record time.
Today Boeing builds biggest aircraft inside biggest factory, by best workforce in the industry. In all 5 different wide body twin aisle aircraft are built at Boeing Everett; 747, 757, 767, 777, and 787. Soon the 797 will start production. Today Boeing Everett covers over 1,000 acres, is largest factory in world, and it is going through another shift in airline economics.
The market has changed and the 777 and 787 are the most popular aircraft for range, capacity, and reduced costs compared to the 747. Airbus learned the hard way with their A380. We proposed a supersized 747, not a brand new super Jumbo. A380 got the sales, we didn't care because we already had 777 and 787 was coming soon.
*_On the plus side, existing 747's in both passenger and freight configurations will be around for decades to come._*
As an employee of Boeing for 15 years, I've had the pleasure of working on the 747 in Everett and seeing it every day. Beautiful bird. Last one just rolled out a few weeks ago. Sad to see
I'm a Proud Incredible.
Part of the Multiple Award Winning 747 E-4440 final assembly crew, that went 2 1/2 years on a 3 day cycle, at 100%. Not a single traveler in all that time. We could have done it in 2 days 🤗 But we were pretty much 100% all the time. It was Fun !!!
Best Aircraft Ever. ...no bias 😏
I had the pleasure to fly on one twice, once to Madrid and once back again. I'll never forget how in Montreal at Mirabel airport, we were herded onto these four unique buses with elevating hydraulics that went to the 747 and loaded us on. The plane was parked quite far from the terminal. It was quite efficient. What a vacation, Grease the Movie played on the transatlantic crossing, 1980. Ah, those were the days, then from Madrid on to Tenerife for a month-long vacation. I never did anything that exotic again.
My father was an A&P Mechanic for TWA at Lambert Intl. In St. Louis 1958-1983. I loved airplanes and flying. The first deliveries of this jet in 1970 were nicknamed "Fat Albert"
I was at London Heathrow Airport (LHR) the day the first 747 arrived. Awesome. I later worked for Singapore Airlines (SQ) for 8 years at LHR and my heart was always pumping when I saw our SQ 747 take off. Bootiful aircraft and the real Queen of the Skys.
An aircraft that changed the World like no other !
My first flight to Japan was in a 747 of Lufthansa. Its just a magic plane.
Back in the late 60's, my grandfather was an engineer at Boeing. He was so proud of being a part of the 747 development team. He used to tell me stories about certain tests that the 747 had to go through. For example, he told me about the wing flex testing as well as measuring heat buildup in the brakes during a hard stop. He was especially proud of the design of the landing gear. He and my grandma lived on Whidbey Island. They had a small ranch there with a few cows. He built a go-cart for us to drive around the property. It was powered by a chainsaw motor. Whenever something broke, he would stay up late at night and re-engineer it so the go-cart would be ready to go the next morning.
I've flown on more types of aircraft than I can remember. The 747 was exceptional for its time. The quietness, cabin air quality of the newer 787/777 and A350 are similar leaps forward in technology but I wonder if they will have the opportunity to have such a long service life.
I'm still happy when a flight is subbed out for an older 767/A340, reminds me of simpler times. The 727 still evokes the strongest memories of any aircraft, the sheer amount of noise on takeoff made you feel like the plane was going to rip the sky apart.. probably doesn't even have a 10th of the power of new planes but they are so much more refined you don't even notice the power.
I worked on UALs 747-100,SP, 200 and mostly the 400. The best experience was flying in first class in 1A or 2A. As you sped down the runway the windows were angled inside to the nose of the Airplane. You had a somewhat forward view of the speed and takeoff. I’m a private pilot and I’ll tell you that’s the most fun I’ve ever had with my clothes on! And the 2nd most amazing experience, I was the flight Mechanic flying charters to Kuwait during the Iraq war. Sitting behind the pilots they pointed out the Northern lights above Canada on the way to Germany, I felt like I could reach out and touch them. And that same trip From Frankfurt to Kuwait we flew over the Pyramids in Egypt, a full moon and some broken clouds allowed us to see them lit up over the desert. Fantastic! And the last experience was sitting behind the Captain as we landed in Frankfurt, to be in the upper deck during the flare and landing I’ll never forget it. So glad to hear everyone’s experience’s, it will always be the Queen to us!
Such a beauty. My favorite of all time is still the L-1011 but I will always remember my trips out of JFK with my mom as a kid on TWA 747s. Magical experiences.
It's not a Fall for 747, its Glorious Ending....
The 747 is synonymous with airplane. Truly one of mankind’s great engineering feats, so ahead of its time.
To me, the 747 is the most beautiful airliner ever built. So elegant and refined despite its size and power.
KLM’s 747 is the most beautiful commercial jet for me!
It was my favourite airplane, had that in countless imaginations. Now it has seen better days and its getting old now.
It isn't the airplane which is getting outdated, it is the model of travel it was designed for which is getting outdated.
It’s sad, she is looking like a dinosaur, but her heydays it was a privilege as soon as I stepped aboard.
@@rockets4kids Time's a changing. I still kinda wish they will still be around.
@@ROBLOXGamingDavid They will be around for a long time to come in the cargo segment.
My first flight to Paris was on a 747. It was so huge and comfortable. I consider myself a little bit fortunate to have experienced it, even if it was coach fare.
I recall Pres. Clinton visited my town back in the 90s. We don't get many 747s here. Me and some friends were outside to see Air Force One fly over our small-ish town, and it was the largest object I've ever seen in the skies above my town. It was an absolutely awe-inspiring site.
I hate to see the Queen Of The Skies go away. It's a beautiful plane and it's "America's Plane." It's an ambassador, symbolizing our country's greatness and pride wherever it goes.
I'm hanging my hopes for a future 747, in some form, on an admittedly unlikely project, although not completely impossible. There exists as a concept a refit _twin engine_ 747, with two modern, powerful, & efficient engines. And the weight would presumably be reduced with modern materials for the airframe and outer skin such as carbon fiber.
I heard about this in another TH-cam video, and I'm not sure how many grains of salt should be taken with that. Lol But I'd love to see it happen.
747 my first air travel experience....back in 1982 .just cant forget. fell in love. sad to see its end. thats life. one guy Manu Chabria, who flew first time to Dubai from Mumbai in this aircraft in 1970s was was so much impressed that he named his small shop as Jumbo Electronics...which ultimately became the biggest electronic business and multi business in middle East. my salute to the team and American spirit doing impossible possible.
I remember the introduction of the 747. I first flew on one in about 1973. It had a piano bar upstairs. I was 14. I kept saying to my parents as we went down the runway “It will never get off the ground.” It was unbelievably huge compared to everything else at the airport. It was an unforgettable experience.
I just saw one of the Atlas 474 today landing at Schiphol airport here AMS. They look amazing on the air.
There will never be another plane like 747 it was iconic.
Airbus A380
It's an absolute beast
4 versions of this beautiful lady of the skies ❤❤❤❤❤ loved working i you .