First McDonnell Douglas on this account
McDonnell Douglas MD-90
The McDonnell Douglas (later Boeing) MD-90 is an American five-abreast single-aisle airliner developed by McDonnell Douglas from its successful model MD-80. The airliner was produced by the developer company until 1997 and then by Boeing Commercial Airplanes. It was a stretched derivative of the MD-80 and thus part of the DC-9 family. After the more fuel-efficient IAE V2500 high-bypass turbofan was selected, Delta Air Lines became the launch customer on November 14, 1989. The MD-90 first flew on February 22, 1993, and the first delivery was in February 1995 to Delta.
The MD-90 competed with the Airbus A320ceo family and the Boeing 737 Next Generation. Its 5 ft (1.4 m) longer fuselage seats 153 passengers in a mixed configuration over up to 2,455 nautical miles [nmi] (4,547 km; 2,825 mi), making it the largest member of the DC-9 family. It kept the MD-88's electronic flight instrument system (EFIS). The shrunken derivative of MD-80 or shorter variant of MD-90, originally marketed as MD-95, was later renamed the Boeing 717 following McDonnell Douglas' merger with Boeing in 1997. Production ended in 2000 after 116 deliveries. Delta Air Lines flew the final MD-90 passenger flight on June 2, 2020. It was briefly retired before being put into testing with Boeing Commercial Airplanes for the X-66A program. It was involved in three hull-loss accidents with only one fatality being a fire related or non-aeronautical accident.
"You stupid ni-"
-Peter Griffin
Note: this is fictional. Scandinavian Airlines don't have MD-90, so i didn't found a MD-80 :/
Specifications
Spotlights
- CCCP0000001 one month ago
General Characteristics
- Predecessor McDonnell Douglas MD-90
- Created On Android
- Wingspan 98.3ft (30.0m)
- Length 135.4ft (41.3m)
- Height 27.4ft (8.4m)
- Empty Weight 25,629lbs (11,625kg)
- Loaded Weight 41,795lbs (18,958kg)
Performance
- Power/Weight Ratio 3.226
- Wing Loading 17.2lbs/ft2 (83.9kg/m2)
- Wing Area 2,432.4ft2 (226.0m2)
- Drag Points 1371
Parts
- Number of Parts 94
- Control Surfaces 9
- Performance Cost 514
@Aviationguy24 Ohhh...
Amazing build!! But SAD did operate a fleet of 8 MD-90 aircraft from 1996 to 2008. The A321 replaced the fleet.