Boeing 717 | |
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A Spanair 717 | |
Role | Airliner |
National origin | United States |
Manufacturer | Boeing Commercial Airplanes |
Designer | McDonnell Douglas |
First flight | September 2, 1998[1] |
Introduction | October 12, 1999 with AirTran Airways[1] |
Status | Not being made anymore, but still being used by airlines |
Primary users | AirTran Airways Hawaiian Airlines Cobham Volotea |
Produced | 1998–2006 |
Number built | 156 |
Developed from | McDonnell Douglas MD-80 |
The Boeing 717 was designed and managed by John Wolf and Jim Phillips starting in 1996 as the MD-95 and became a new twinjet airliner. It has two engines, which means that it is a twinjet. It also only has two columns of seats, which makes it a narrow-body plane. The Boeing 717 was designed and sold by McDonnell Douglas when it was called the MD-95 and was designed from the DC-9. The 717 can hold up to 117 passengers. It can fly for 2,060 nautical miles (3,820 kilometres). The 717 has two Rolls-Royce BR715 turbofan engines.
The first MD-95 was ordered in October 1995. Boeing bought McDonnell Douglas in 1997,[2] which was before the first MD-95 was made. The first plane was finished in 1999, and it was called the Boeing 717. Boeing stopped making 717s in May 2006. 156 were made.[3]