(Remastered)B737-900[W]
A replica of the Boeing 737-900(With Winglets)
Engine type: CFMI CFM56-7B26 & 7B27
Credit to @GalacticaAsia for his original B737-800
About the history of Boeing 737-800 & -900
Boeing's Next Generation 737-800 and 737-900 are the largest members of the strong selling 737 family. Unlike the other Next Generation 737s, the -800 and -900 introduce new fuselage lengths, extending 737 single class seating range out to 189, compared with 100 in the original 737-100. Like the -600 and -700, the -800 and -900 feature the Next Generation improvements including more efficient CFM56-7B turbofans, the new wing with greater chord, span and wing area, larger tail surfaces and the 777 style EFIS flightdeck with six flat panel LCDs which can present information as on the 777 or as on the 737-300/400/500 series, the latter allowing a common pilot type rating for the two 737 families. A HUD is optional. BBJ style winglets are offered as an optional feature for the -800. Until its launch on September 5, 1994 the 737-800 was known as the 737-400X Stretch. Compared with the -400 the -800 is 3.02m (9ft 9in) longer, taking typical two class seating from 146 to 162, while range is significantly increased. The -800 has sold strongly since its launch, and early 2002 was the highest selling Next Generation model. First flight was on July 31 1997, first delivery (to Hapag Lloyd) was in April 1998. The largest single order for the -800 series has come from the Irish budget carrier, Ryanair. After 28 had already been ordered earlier, a firm order for 100 aircraft was made in January 2002, with an option of another 50, to be delivered over the next 8 years. Ryanair will use the aircraft in a single class configuration, to seat 189 passengers A variant of the 737-800 is the Boeing Business Jet 2 (BBJ2), which is described separately. The 737-900 is the largest and latest member of the 737 family, and was launched on September 10, 1997 with an order for 10 from Alaska Airlines. A 1.57m (5ft 2in) plug forward of the wing and a 1.07m (3ft 6in) plug rear compared with the -800 increases seating to 177 in two classes (maximum seating is the same as the 737-800's due to emergency exit requirements). First flight was made August 3, 2000, and the first delivery (to Alaska Airlines) May 15, 2001.
Rework Places
1.Add small windows at four hatch doors
2.Corrected the number of windows on the aircraft.
3.Made with B737-800 with more details added.
Have a nice flight!
Specifications
General Characteristics
- Predecessor B737-800
- Successors 7 airplane(s) +185 bonus
- Created On Android
- Wingspan 117.5ft (35.8m)
- Length 138.1ft (42.1m)
- Height 41.5ft (12.6m)
- Empty Weight N/A
- Loaded Weight 42,125lbs (19,108kg)
Performance
- Power/Weight Ratio 1.182
- Horse Power/Weight Ratio 0.071
- Wing Loading 23.7lbs/ft2 (115.7kg/m2)
- Wing Area 1,778.2ft2 (165.2m2)
- Drag Points 8501
Parts
- Number of Parts 482
- Control Surfaces 9
- Performance Cost 2,903
@Brololxd It Uses the Olyma-Thunder Bay map made by Annedzsure and the Summer Cloud module made by hpgbproductions.
Whats the map(Background of the 737) if i could ask