Moderators: jsumali2, richierich, ua900, PanAm_DC10, hOMSaR
DaveFly wrote:Oh, I think the DC-8-63 was the most beautiful plane ever designed! My first passenger flights were aboard them to places like New York, the Bahamas, Canary Islands, Lisbon. Extremely comfortable, although a visit to the lav on a -63 was an exercise in advance planning! It was a long walk. But those were the days when flying was special.
As for the plane's usefulness, they were popular with United, Eastern, Delta, Braniff, KLM, Finnair, and many others I'm forgetting. And in later years, they were in wide use as freighters.
VC10er wrote:I'm sure NYC - Chicago was always big.
VC10er wrote:Could they make it to deep South America?
VC10er wrote:THANKS, beauty is always extremely subjective! And I had no idea that PanAm had them. What routes did PanAm use them on? Could they make it to deep South America?
But, truly, what were the positives of the DC-8? What were her performance specs and what could she do? Was the DC-8 often used on TATL flights by the other airlines mentioned?
Natflyer wrote:VC10er wrote:THANKS, beauty is always extremely subjective! And I had no idea that PanAm had them. What routes did PanAm use them on? Could they make it to deep South America?
But, truly, what were the positives of the DC-8? What were her performance specs and what could she do? Was the DC-8 often used on TATL flights by the other airlines mentioned?
In the case of the stretched DC-8 beauty is definitely not subjective! Scores of DC-8s on TATL routes carrying as many as 250 pax. SAS, KLM, Loftleidir (later Icelandair), Air Bahama, Finnair,
Iberia, Alitalia, Swissair to name some. The DC-8-63 was the longhaul people mover. I flew it TATL and around Africa and Middle-East for 4-5 years.
One of the better liveries:
[url]
https://www.airliners.net/photo/Internat ... kxHQ%3D%3D[/url]
Sorry don't know how to post a picture...
727200 wrote:Bit of trivia for you on UA's DC-8's. When UA acquired the LHR routes, which at the time were on the wishlist of every airline, the the issue became what equipment to fly ORD-LHR. The airline was really stretched thin at the time with no spares available, and if I recall correctly Pan Am aircraft were not included in the transaction. So the crew at EXO was laying awake at night trying to make it work. After all these were routes UA had wanted for decades and were finally going to have them. So the proposal came back to start service using DC-8s since nothing else could be freed up; this was the time period of "Royal Service" and the name had to be changed because of the Royal Family, but that is another topic to be discussed. Of course no one wanted to use the old DC-8s for startup service to the most prestigious International hub and eventually they did some aircraft swaps to begin service with DC-10s. If the swaps had not occurred, we would have some great pics of the UA 8s at Heathrow.
One other point, initially UA wanted to do hourly service ORD-LHR since ORD was the main hub and at the time busiest airport in the world and LHR was the busiest international airport. Schedules of crews and planes were drawn up and set to go, but then the view was "Lets see how the route does before we commit these resources." It never came to pass and the Stephen Wolfe era came to a close after that.
Lpbri wrote:Here is what I have:
DC-8-12
23 total 2 lost 21 converted to -21
DC-8-21
14 factory delivered
DC-8-54F
15 total 1 lost
DC-8-52
13 total
DC-8-61
30 delivered all but 1 converted to -71
DC-8-62H
10 total
DC-8-32/33
8 total acquired secondhand from Pan Am
113 in all. One of my favorites.
PPVLC wrote:A bit off topic I'm sorry, but I must confess that it took me a long time to find the DC8 beautiful. I always thought the 707 was perfect in design terms and the DC8 was a bit out of proportion, lately I started "understanding" its lines and my opinion changed.
727200 wrote:Bit of trivia for you on UA's DC-8's. When UA acquired the LHR routes, which at the time were on the wishlist of every airline, the the issue became what equipment to fly ORD-LHR. The airline was really stretched thin at the time with no spares available, and if I recall correctly Pan Am aircraft were not included in the transaction. So the crew at EXO was laying awake at night trying to make it work. After all these were routes UA had wanted for decades and were finally going to have them. So the proposal came back to start service using DC-8s since nothing else could be freed up; this was the time period of "Royal Service" and the name had to be changed because of the Royal Family, but that is another topic to be discussed. Of course no one wanted to use the old DC-8s for startup service to the most prestigious International hub and eventually they did some aircraft swaps to begin service with DC-10s. If the swaps had not occurred, we would have some great pics of the UA 8s at Heathrow.
One other point, initially UA wanted to do hourly service ORD-LHR since ORD was the main hub and at the time busiest airport in the world and LHR was the busiest international airport. Schedules of crews and planes were drawn up and set to go, but then the view was "Lets see how the route does before we commit these resources." It never came to pass and the Stephen Wolfe era came to a close after that.
klm617 wrote:Lpbri wrote:Here is what I have:
DC-8-12
23 total 2 lost 21 converted to -21
DC-8-21
14 factory delivered
DC-8-54F
15 total 1 lost
DC-8-52
13 total
DC-8-61
30 delivered all but 1 converted to -71
DC-8-62H
10 total
DC-8-32/33
8 total acquired secondhand from Pan Am
113 in all. One of my favorites.
There were 2 DC-8-54Fs lost and one DC-8-61 lost.
BoeingGuy wrote:klm617 wrote:Lpbri wrote:Here is what I have:
DC-8-12
23 total 2 lost 21 converted to -21
DC-8-21
14 factory delivered
DC-8-54F
15 total 1 lost
DC-8-52
13 total
DC-8-61
30 delivered all but 1 converted to -71
DC-8-62H
10 total
DC-8-32/33
8 total acquired secondhand from Pan Am
113 in all. One of my favorites.
There were 2 DC-8-54Fs lost and one DC-8-61 lost.
The lost DC-8-61 was the accident near PDX, I think. Is that correct?
dcajet wrote:VC10er wrote:Could they make it to deep South America?
The DC-8-62 was the longest range version of the DC-8 family, United used them on the ORD-HNL route and to your question, Braniff International flew 62 nonstop from JFK to EZE for years.
JAL used the 62 from HND to SFO (those were the days before NRT, so I guess it was TYO) nonstop.
AZ used their 62s from FCO to EZE with one tech stop only in Dakar DKR. That was before the DC-10, lets say 1971-72 and thanks to the DC-8-62 travelers could avoid the stops in Brazil.
So yes, they could make it to deep South America.
BoeingGuy wrote:DaveFly wrote:Oh, I think the DC-8-63 was the most beautiful plane ever designed! My first passenger flights were aboard them to places like New York, the Bahamas, Canary Islands, Lisbon. Extremely comfortable, although a visit to the lav on a -63 was an exercise in advance planning! It was a long walk. But those were the days when flying was special.
As for the plane's usefulness, they were popular with United, Eastern, Delta, Braniff, KLM, Finnair, and many others I'm forgetting. And in later years, they were in wide use as freighters.
United never had the DC-8-63. They had the -61 and a small fleet of -62s.
727200 wrote:Bit of trivia for you on UA's DC-8's. When UA acquired the LHR routes, which at the time were on the wishlist of every airline, the the issue became what equipment to fly ORD-LHR. The airline was really stretched thin at the time with no spares available, and if I recall correctly Pan Am aircraft were not included in the transaction. So the crew at EXO was laying awake at night trying to make it work. After all these were routes UA had wanted for decades and were finally going to have them. So the proposal came back to start service using DC-8s since nothing else could be freed up; this was the time period of "Royal Service" and the name had to be changed because of the Royal Family, but that is another topic to be discussed. Of course no one wanted to use the old DC-8s for startup service to the most prestigious International hub and eventually they did some aircraft swaps to begin service with DC-10s. If the swaps had not occurred, we would have some great pics of the UA 8s at Heathrow.
One other point, initially UA wanted to do hourly service ORD-LHR since ORD was the main hub and at the time busiest airport in the world and LHR was the busiest international airport. Schedules of crews and planes were drawn up and set to go, but then the view was "Lets see how the route does before we commit these resources." It never came to pass and the Stephen Wolfe era came to a close after that.
727200 wrote:Bit of trivia for you on UA's DC-8's. When UA acquired the LHR routes, which at the time were on the wishlist of every airline, the the issue became what equipment to fly ORD-LHR. The airline was really stretched thin at the time with no spares available, and if I recall correctly Pan Am aircraft were not included in the transaction. So the crew at EXO was laying awake at night trying to make it work. After all these were routes UA had wanted for decades and were finally going to have them. So the proposal came back to start service using DC-8s since nothing else could be freed up; this was the time period of "Royal Service" and the name had to be changed because of the Royal Family, but that is another topic to be discussed. Of course no one wanted to use the old DC-8s for startup service to the most prestigious International hub and eventually they did some aircraft swaps to begin service with DC-10s. If the swaps had not occurred, we would have some great pics of the UA 8s at Heathrow.
One other point, initially UA wanted to do hourly service ORD-LHR since ORD was the main hub and at the time busiest airport in the world and LHR was the busiest international airport. Schedules of crews and planes were drawn up and set to go, but then the view was "Lets see how the route does before we commit these resources." It never came to pass and the Stephen Wolfe era came to a close after that.
DeltaRules wrote:I think I saw somewhere the -71s had some form of video IFE late in the going. True?
Channex757 wrote:One thing the Diesel 8 had going for it was the rock solid reliability of Douglas planes compared to the rest. Douglas overbuilt their aircraft, and in the days when kerosene was cents a gallon the weight penalties didn't matter as much.
United also had the Boeing 720 which was a similar-ish type of aircraft in the early years but their flagship aircraft before the days of the 747 was definitely the DC-8. That's why they persisted much longer than the 707 family as freighters too. The legendary Douglas build quality meant those aircraft lasted longer, could be converted to CFM56 and also the stretch versions gave much more usable volume.
Nothing was ever as beautiful IMO as seeing a CP Air DC8-63 on stand on a snowy day.
Max Q wrote:727200 wrote:Bit of trivia for you on UA's DC-8's. When UA acquired the LHR routes, which at the time were on the wishlist of every airline, the the issue became what equipment to fly ORD-LHR. The airline was really stretched thin at the time with no spares available, and if I recall correctly Pan Am aircraft were not included in the transaction. So the crew at EXO was laying awake at night trying to make it work. After all these were routes UA had wanted for decades and were finally going to have them. So the proposal came back to start service using DC-8s since nothing else could be freed up; this was the time period of "Royal Service" and the name had to be changed because of the Royal Family, but that is another topic to be discussed. Of course no one wanted to use the old DC-8s for startup service to the most prestigious International hub and eventually they did some aircraft swaps to begin service with DC-10s. If the swaps had not occurred, we would have some great pics of the UA 8s at Heathrow.
One other point, initially UA wanted to do hourly service ORD-LHR since ORD was the main hub and at the time busiest airport in the world and LHR was the busiest international airport. Schedules of crews and planes were drawn up and set to go, but then the view was "Lets see how the route does before we commit these resources." It never came to pass and the Stephen Wolfe era came to a close after that.
United started service to LHR with the 747 Classic, not the DC10.
727200 wrote:Bit of trivia for you on UA's DC-8's. When UA acquired the LHR routes, which at the time were on the wishlist of every airline, the the issue became what equipment to fly ORD-LHR. The airline was really stretched thin at the time with no spares available, and if I recall correctly Pan Am aircraft were not included in the transaction. So the crew at EXO was laying awake at night trying to make it work. After all these were routes UA had wanted for decades and were finally going to have them. So the proposal came back to start service using DC-8s since nothing else could be freed up; this was the time period of "Royal Service" and the name had to be changed because of the Royal Family, but that is another topic to be discussed. Of course no one wanted to use the old DC-8s for startup service to the most prestigious International hub and eventually they did some aircraft swaps to begin service with DC-10s. If the swaps had not occurred, we would have some great pics of the UA 8s at Heathrow.
One other point, initially UA wanted to do hourly service ORD-LHR since ORD was the main hub and at the time busiest airport in the world and LHR was the busiest international airport. Schedules of crews and planes were drawn up and set to go, but then the view was "Lets see how the route does before we commit these resources." It never came to pass and the Stephen Wolfe era came to a close after that.
VC10er wrote:And I had no idea that PanAm had them. What routes did PanAm use them on?
2Holer4Longhaul wrote:Channex757 wrote:One thing the Diesel 8 had going for it was the rock solid reliability of Douglas planes compared to the rest. Douglas overbuilt their aircraft, and in the days when kerosene was cents a gallon the weight penalties didn't matter as much.
United also had the Boeing 720 which was a similar-ish type of aircraft in the early years but their flagship aircraft before the days of the 747 was definitely the DC-8. That's why they persisted much longer than the 707 family as freighters too. The legendary Douglas build quality meant those aircraft lasted longer, could be converted to CFM56 and also the stretch versions gave much more usable volume.
Nothing was ever as beautiful IMO as seeing a CP Air DC8-63 on stand on a snowy day.
I'm pretty sure part of the reason why the 707 "vanished" and the DC-8 didn't is the USAF's massive spares-purchasing program for the KC-135
BostonBeau wrote:VC10er wrote:And I had no idea that PanAm had them. What routes did PanAm use them on?
Pan Am bought DC-8's mostly as a bargaining chip with Boeing. The B707 was originally designed to have 5-across seating in Economy, whereas the DC-8 was going to have 6-across. To convince Boeing that 6-across was the way to go, Pan Am ordered 20 original B707's, but also ordered 25 DC-8's at the same time. Boeing got the message and redesigned the B707 to be wide enough for 6-across. I think Pan Am was still 50% owner of Panagra at the time, and since Panagra was buying DC-8's, I would think Pan Am figured they could easily enough sell the DC-8's to Panagra or some other DC-8 user.
ord wrote:Some quick facts: United began service on the Heathrow routes acquired from Pan Am on April 3, 1991. Chicago was not included. ORD-LHR service began on September 12, 1995 after the U.S.-U.K. bilateral treaty was amended. United was only permitted to operate one daily nonstop at first, and service was not expanded between the two cities until 1997.
gwrudolph wrote:By September 12, 1995, United would have also had the 777 entering their fleet (started coming online in June 1995). I'm not saying they used a 777 for ORD-LHR, but I wouldn't doubt it.
Again, I don't recollect them ever using the DC10s on TATL. They did use them on Pacific routes, but even there it was mainly intra-Asia and HNL-Asia.
VC10er wrote:
But, truly, what were the positives of the DC-8?
What were her performance specs and what could she do?
Was the DC-8 often used on TATL flights by the other airlines mentioned?
I admit I really don't know a thing.
BoeingGuy wrote:DaveFly wrote:Oh, I think the DC-8-63 was the most beautiful plane ever designed! My first passenger flights were aboard them to places like New York, the Bahamas, Canary Islands, Lisbon. Extremely comfortable, although a visit to the lav on a -63 was an exercise in advance planning! It was a long walk. But those were the days when flying was special.
As for the plane's usefulness, they were popular with United, Eastern, Delta, Braniff, KLM, Finnair, and many others I'm forgetting. And in later years, they were in wide use as freighters.
United never had the DC-8-63. They had the -61 and a small fleet of -62s.
N62NA wrote:VC10er wrote:I'm sure NYC - Chicago was always big.
Actually, LGA-ORD was handled by 727/737 and EWR was mostly 727/737 (with some DC8s back in the 60s and then DC-10s in the 70s/80s). Not much (if any) UA service JFK-ORD.
BravoOne wrote:What is a DC8 62H? Have never seen that designation unless it was something that UA stuck on there.