Boeing 767

The Boeing 767 is a commercial passenger airplane manufactured by Boeing Commercial Airplanes. The Boeing 767, a widebody jet, was introduced at around the same time as the 757, its narrowbody sister. The 767 has a seat-to-aisle ratio in economy class of 3.5 seats per aisle, making for quicker food service and quicker exit of the plane than many other jetliners, which typically have between four and six seats per aisle in economy class. The 767 is to be replaced in the Boeing lineup by the 787.

Variants


General characteristics

! bgcolor=#87CEEB|767-200 ! bgcolor=#87CEEB|767-200ER ! bgcolor=#87CEEB|767-300 ! bgcolor=#87CEEB|767-300ER ! bgcolor=#87CEEB|767-300F ! bgcolor=#87CEEB|767-400ER
Length colspan="2" | 48.5 m
(159 ft 2 in)
colspan="3" | 54.9 m
(180 ft 3 in)
61.4 m
(201 ft 4 in)
Wingspan colspan="5" | 47.6 m
(156 ft 1 in)
51.9 m
(170 ft 4 in)
Passengers colspan="2" | 181 to 255 colspan="2" | 218 to 351 0 245 to 375
Cargo colspan="2" | 81.4 m³ (2,875 ft³)
22 LD2s
colspan="2" | 106.8 m³ (3,770 ft³)
30 LD2s
454 m³ (16,034 ft³)
30 LD2s + 24 pallets
129.6 m³ (4,580 ft³)
38 LD2s
Range 9,400 km
(5,200 nautical miles)
transcontinental
12,200 km
(6,600 nautical miles)
transpacific
9,700 km
(5,230 nautical miles)
transcontinental
11,305 km
(6,105 nautical miles)
transpacific
6,050 km
(3,270 nautical miles)
transcontinental
10,450 km
(5,650 nautical miles)
transatlantic
Cruise speed colspan="6" | Mach 0.8 (870 km/h, 540 mph)
Engines colspan="6" | Two high-bypass turbofans, usually either General Electric CF6-80 (about 65,000 lbf (289 kN) thrust each) or Pratt & Whitney PW4062 (about 63,000 lbf (280 kN) thrust each); some aircraft use Rolls-Royce RB211 (about 60,000 lbf (267 kN) thrust each)

Disasters

Specific Accidents

Two Boeing 767 aircraft were involved in the September 11, 2001 attacks. American Airlines Flight 11, a 767-223ER, crashed into the north tower of the World Trade Center, with 93 fatalities on board. United Airlines Flight 175, a 767-222, crashed into the south tower, with the loss of all 65 on board. In addition, 2602 people perished on the ground, mostly in the two towers.

Accident Summary

(as of 2004)
  • Hull-loss Accidents: 6 with a total of 568 fatalities
  • Other occurrences: 2 with a total of 0 fatalities
  • Hijackings: 5 with a total of 282 fatalities

Trivia

  • The air flowing through a 767-400ER engine at takeoff power could inflate the Goodyear blimp in seven seconds.

See also

External links

bgcolor="#87CEEB" colspan="2" align="center" style="border-bottom:3px solid"|Related content
b>Related Development align="center"|
b>Similar Aircraft align="center"| Airbus A300 - Airbus A310 - Airbus A330 - Boeing 787

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
leg theory
blythe danner
bioleaching
bouldering
bowling
boiling point
big bang
bock
bantu
b roll
bantu languages
bearing
bomarc missile program
branco river
bus
bali
bulgarian language
bipyramid
beast of bodmin
borda count
british library
brown university
bill atkinson
battle of lostwithiel
berne (disambiguation)
bertrand russell
bill walsh (nfl)
utility knife
bronze
benelux
boston herald
babe ruth
bacon number
barge
bill schelter
british english
battle
berry berenson
botany
bacillus thuringiensis
bacteriostat
bacteriocide
brion gysin
bulgarian