The 1965 movie Boeing Boeing has a much deeper aspect to it than what the premise suggests. Tony Curtis an American Journalist based in Paris has an elaborate timetable of Stewardess girlfriends who come in and out of Paris on their turboprop airliners and he is able to manage this beautifully, that is until the new fangled Jetliners begin to make their appearance. They cut travel time in half and the film is a satirical take on the turn of events as theses aircraft enter airline fleets. Jerry Lewis in the film is just being Jerry Lewis!

From the coming of age for aviation on that chilly December day in 1903 when the Flyer first took flight, three aspects of aircraft have been centre stage, Speed, Range & Altitude flown.
Airlines – Airplanes
The St Petersburg – Tampa Airboat Line was the very first scheduled airline ever created in 1914. It promised to connect the two cities of St Petersburg and Tampa in twenty three minutes. This was against a time of two hours by boat, twenty hours by car or four to twelve hours by train.

The revenue management was simple. Ticket prices were $5 dollars for a one way ticket and the aeroplane could carry one passenger.A round trip cost $10 and advance booking of seats was possible (although no information exists on advance purchase rules). The very first air passenger ever was Mr Abram C Pheil, a former mayor of St Petersburg and he won the seat in auction for a winning bid of $400. The airboat never flew higher than five feet in the air.
Commenting on the significance of the St. Petersburg–Tampa Airboat line, Thomas Benoist, the builder of the Benoist airboats, said, “Some day people will be crossing oceans on airliners like they do on steamships today.” The airline served as a prototype for today’s global airline industry.
A sister aeroplane was ordered and this was to carry mail. The first air cargo bundle was a hundred pounds of the St Petersburg Times for $5. This is definitely the first freighter ever!
From the example above, it is clear that Airplane manufacturers and airlines have always gone hand in hand, and together created the global aviation industry what it is today, 110 years on.
The Incremental Years
The first airmail service was on February 11,1911 in India between Allahabad and Naini a distance of 13 kilometres (8.1 miles). Airmail networks quickly developed in the UK, USA,Europe and Australia.

Airmail took off first before passenger transport as the initial years were about trial and error and most people viewed the aircraft as a dangerous novelty . Airmail was directly responsible for creating the early route networks. Furthermore they were responsible for creating the infrastructure such as airports including layover facilities for crew, runways, route navigation updates and guides , engineering & refuelling services needed to keep the airmail pipeline moving. Of course Government interest and subsidies helped develop them in a big way.
The first major airlines appeared in the late teens and through the twenties, KLM, Qantas, Imperial Airways, United Airlines and Panam to name a few. American Airlines only made its appearance in 1934, Air India in 1932. As people realised there were options to long steamer and rail journeys, they began to look to air as an option. The early air routes were about connecting cities within Europe, UK, Australia & USA and India.
Charles Lindbergh changed all that on those famous days in 1927 when he flew from New York to Paris , solo and non stop. Trans Atlantic passenger services soon followed.
Air Travel was very elitist and most aircraft only had first class and passengers travelled in airborne opulence. As is the same today, first and business class travel is a very limited segment and for airlines to scale up and democratise air travel, aeroplanes needed to be faster, bigger and cheaper to fly on. The race was on.

Early metal airliners such as the Douglas DC-3 , Boeing 247, Lockheed Model 10 Electra ( Amelia Earheart’s plane) and Ford Trimotor competed for the crown of most passengers and speed. The DC-3 outstripped most of the competition with a maximum passenger capacity of 32 passengers and a range of 1500 miles (2400 kilometres). The others had passenger capacities of around 10-15.

Aircraft needed to fly higher to go faster more economically, and there came the human factor, our bodies react adversely to the cold and lack of oxygen at higher altitudes. The highest we can breathe normally is around 10,000 feet, and the current crop of aircraft were restricted to this height due to the human factor. The barf bags we barely glance at on most flights we take today, were a necessity in the 1930s due to altitude sickness suffered. Aircraft therefore had to fly through rough weather systems instead of over them. The flights were unpleasant.
The airlines needed to scale up and a solution was needed to tackle the human factor altitude restriction.
The Pressurization & Early Jet Effect
In 1938 the Boeing Stratoliner became the first aircraft to offer a pressurised cabin. Pressurised to 9000 feet. Passengers flew in relative comfort for longer distances. With a cruising altitude of 20,000 feet and range of 2200 miles it was a big improvement over what was currently available. There was one catch, the price was much higher than aircraft such as the DC-3. Airlines could not see the value of such a visionary aircraft. The war soon came and changed everything.

The Heinkel 178 ( He178) first was the first jet plane to fly in 1939. Owing to the early days this jet was only marginally faster than the current crop of fighters and guzzled much more fuel, the Nazi management could not see the advantage of speed yet and continued with their Messerschmitt Me 109s and Focke-Wulf FW 190s.

The first pressurised aircraft to fly for extended periods successfully was the B-29 Superfortress. It first flew in 1942 and its specifications grabbed eyeballs immediately! In addition to a pressurised cabin, it flew at over 31,000 feet, at a cruising speed of 357 mph and a range of over 3000 miles.
The Me262 first flew in 1944 the same year as the Gloster Meteor. The pilots of these aircraft had to carry oxygen masks as the cabins were not pressurised, and the aircraft themselves entered too late in the war to make a difference to the eventual outcome, but their speed and advantage over conventional aircraft was obvious for all to see.

Both Boeing and the airlines knew there was synergy here and Boeing quickly converted the B29 into the B377 Stratocruiser that set fresh benchmarks in air passenger travel. Although only 46 were ever sold, it were known for their comfort of travel over long distances.
The age of the pressurised cabin had arrived.
The Transition
Howard Hughes ‘The Aviator’ had a controlling interest in TWA. He wanted to create an aircraft that was far superior to anything in the late 30s and early 40s. Enter the Lockheed Constellation! A cruising speed of over 350 mph(575 km/h), cruising altitude of over 24000 feet and a range of 3500 miles (5600 kilometres). The cabin was pressurised and could carry over 75 passengers.

Howard Hughes was fanatical about the secrecy of the project and the only reason the project saw light was because of the US war effort and the mandatory inspection of Lockheed’s facilities.
The US Army immediately gave the Connie a designation number of C69 and put 15 of them to work for the US Military. Once the war ended Lockheed bought the aircraft back and fitted them out to airline specs and sold them.
The Super Constellation with an increased range of over 5400 miles (8170 kilometres) came into service in 1951. By then the De Havilland Comet was just making its appearance.
The Constellation is the first example of how closely airlines and airframe manufacturers need to work to create a legend.
The Jet Age
The DeHavilland Comet 1 was an aircraft before its time. It was first introduced in 1952 and could fly at over 500 mph (800 km/h) and carry 36 passengers with a range of over 1500 miles (2400 kilometres). With a cruising altitude of over 25,000 feet, this jet was all airline dreams come true, after initial scepticism they lined up to buy the aircraft. Airlines could not afford not to have them. And then the crashes happened.

Aviation’s limited understanding of pressurisation and the resulting effects on the aircraft fuselage skin left the fleet grounded. Dehavilland a visionary company that even made its own engines, had lost the first movers advantage. By the time the Comet 4 was unveiled in 1958 with massive improvements over preceding models the momentum had been lost to another epic aircraft. Proof the Comet’s ruggedness and endurance can be seen in the 46 RAF Nimrods ( derived from the Comet) that operated until 2011. A testament to engineering of the highest quality.
The Boeing 707-80 or demonstrator aircraft was a passenger jet disguised as military aircraft. The cost of development ( over $16 Million) was worth over 25% of Boeing’s total value. The disguise worked and the Military finally ordered the second iteration of the B707 ( KC135 and used over 800 of them) , and third with a completely redesigned fuselage and wing. The cost of the program development escalated exponentially with each iteration and Boeing needed to sell hundreds of 707s to break even.

The aircraft with a cruising speed of around 600 mph (960 km/h), cruising altitude of over 35,000 feet and range of around 4000 miles (6500 kilometres). Intercontinental models had higher ranges of over 5750 miles (9260 kilometres), changed aviation forever.
Summation
The B707 along with all that came before it shrank the world. The airlines who were looking to democratise air travel got to do exactly that.Fly more people further and cheaper than ever before.
The B707s biggest advertisement was President Eisenhower used the B707 to travel to 11 countries across the Globe in 19 days. A feat only made possible by the B707. And then there is Tex Johnston and his famous barrel roll.

Airline Commercial Infrastructure changed to keep pace. Route Network Planning became a critical department for every major airline. Revenue Management would find its true wings only in the twenty-first century.
Boeing Boeing the movie is a definitive marker of the turning to burning transition.
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