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Douglas DC-7: America’s last great piston-powered airliner

Douglas DC-7: America’s last great piston-powered airliner
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Douglas DC-7 | Wikipedia

In an era dominated by modern jets and efficient turboprops, the Douglas DC-7 stands as a tribute to the past. Known as America's last great piston-powered airliner, this aircraft represents the final chapter of the piston-engine age in commercial aviation. Developed in the 1950s, the DC-7 was designed for long-haul travel and was capable of nonstop flights from New York to Los Angeles.

"The Douglas DC-7 is considered the last major piston-engine, propeller-driven airliner in the US," notes Epic Flight Academy. The aircraft was powered by Wright R-3350 Duplex-Cyclone engines, providing both speed and range. However, these engines were known for being mechanically complex and prone to overheating.

Major airlines like American Airlines, United Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Eastern Air Lines, and Braniff operated the DC-7. It offered new commercial possibilities such as nonstop coast-to-coast flights. Delta Air Lines introduced it in 1954 and used it until 1968.

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As jet technology advanced in the late 1950s with aircraft like Boeing 707 and Douglas DC-8, piston engines became obsolete due to their higher efficiency and reliability. By the end of that decade, most airlines had retired their DC-7 fleets.

Today, some examples of this historic aircraft can be found in museums like Delta Flight Museum in Atlanta and Pima Air & Space Museum in Tucson. These serve as educational tools about a forgotten generation of aviation design.

While passenger service for piston planes has ended, some warbirds remain airworthy for displays at airshows. Among them is another Douglas-built plane: A-1 Skyraider from Vietnam War fame—"the last US combat aircraft powered by a piston engine," according to Smithsonian Magazine.

The legacy left behind by these machines continues through museum exhibits where they are celebrated not only for what they achieved but also how far technology has come since then—a testament to an age when flying was both thrilling yet challenging before jets took over skies worldwide entirely marking beginning Jet Age dominance across all sectors within industry itself!

Organizations Included in this History
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