Airliner World – May 2018

(Nora) #1

The -200 series proved
popular with a variety of
British carriers including
Air Europe, Air UK Leisure,
Ambassador Airways,
British Airways, Caledonian,
Dan-Air and Inter European.
London Luton-based
Britannia Airways operated
around 45 different
examples, including G-BECG
(c/n 21335), which was
delivered new in April 1977.
KEY COLLECTION


Northern Air Cargo’s Boeing
737-232A freighter N321DL
(c/n 23093) is equipped
with a gravel kit, including
deflectors on the nose and
main landing gear and
vortex dissipaters to protect
the engines from ingesting
debris. The modifications
were popular with carriers
serving remote regions – at
its peak of operation, 737s
were completing more than
2,000 movements a year
from unpaved runways.
AIRTEAMIMAGES.COM/
DARREN HOWIE


32 AIRLINER WORLD JUNE 2018


Key Dates
Family Original Classic Next-Generation MAX
Series 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 7, 8, 9, 10
First flight Apr 9, 1967 Aug 8, 1967 Feb 24, 1984 Feb 19, 1988 Jun 30, 1989 Jan 22, 1998 Feb 9, 1997 Jul 31, 1997 Aug 3, 2000 Jan 29, 2016
First delivery Dec 28, 1967 Dec 29, 1967 Nov 28, 1984 Sep 15, 1988 Feb 28, 1990 Sep 18, 1998 Dec 17, 1997 Apr 22, 1998 May 15, 2001 May 22, 2017
Launch customer Lufthansa United Airlines US Air Piedmont Airlines Southwest Airlines SAS Southwest Airlines Hapag Lloyd Alaska Airlines Batik Air
Last delivery Nov 2, 1969 Aug 2, 1988 Dec 17, 1999 Feb 25, 2000 Jul 21, 1999 Aug 31, 2006 - - - -
Units produced 30 1,114 1,113 486 389 69 1,280 4,853 510 86
On order - - - - - - 5 321 569 4,230

above normal operational levels.
As a quick fix, engineers reinforced
the rear spar on the first two test aircraft
to increase this figure up to 50%, but
further delays were encountered
after the modified wing had to be put
through another structural overload
cycle. Additional design refinement
enabled the manufacturer to squeeze
even more performance from the wing,
an essential development after the
stronger but heavier spars increased
weight and compromised the 737’s
short-field performance – one of its
major selling points.
Certification for the series -100 was
received from the FAA on December 15,
1967, with approval for the longer -200
following six days later. Remarkably, the
manufacturer met its original certifica-
tion schedule though the first example
was not delivered to Lufthansa until
December 28, too late for Boeing's
planned end-of-year entry into service,
which came the following February.

Growing Appeal
Boeing worked throughout 1968 to
develop a longer-term solution to the
excess drag issue. The additional 500lb
of thrust offered by the more powerful
P&W JT8D-9 turbofan again delivered a
quick fix, but more substantial chang-
es were necessary. After almost a year
of wind tunnel and flight testing, sev-
eral aerodynamic modifications were
made. This included redesigned engine
nacelles and wing fairings, improved
airflow over the lower edge of the wing,
vortex generators on the rear fuselage
and redesigned thrust reversers.
These upgrades were introduced as
standard from aircraft number 135 and

ushered the 737 into a new era – pay-
load and range had been improved
significantly, while cruising speed and
short-field performance were far closer
to the original specifications laid down
by Boeing.
Successful as the changes were, the
small capacity of the 737-100 meant the
variant attracted just 30 orders. The
bigger -200 offered a much more eco-
nomical proposition, and Boeing moved
to maximise the type’s appeal. This
included two special variants, the -200C
convertible and 200QC ‘quick-change’,
both of which were equipped with a
large cargo door in the forward fuse-
lage, specialist handling equipment and
reinforced cabin floors, enabling mixed
passenger and freight operation or rapid
reconfiguration between the two.
Among the more unusual options
offered by Boeing was the ‘Unpaved
Strip Kit’ (or gravel kit). Rolled out in
early 1969, the modification included
installing gravel deflectors on the nose

and main landing gear to protect the
fuselage and wings, reinforcing the
airframe and antennas, applying an
abrasion-resistant Teflon-based paint
on undersurfaces, a retractable lower
anti-collision light and vortex dissipat-
ers to protect the engines from ingest-
ing debris.
The protective equipment added to
the 737’s versatility and, according to
Boeing, limited extra maintenance
costs associated with flying to and from
semi-prepared airstrips (with, for exam-
ple, additional tyre wear and paint loss)
to just $15 per landing. It was certain-
ly popular with carriers serving remote
regions – at its peak of operation, 737s
were completing more than 2,000
movements a year from unpaved
runways.

Advancing the Design
With the 737 established and in
service, Boeing set about a radical
development programme, producing
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