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![]() Interior of the Boeing Everett Factory in Everett, Washington, 2013 | |
Type | Division |
---|---|
Industry | Aviation |
Founded | July 15, 1916 |
Founder | William Boeing |
Headquarters | Renton, Washington , U.S. |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | Stan Deal (President and CEO of BCA) |
Products | 737, 747, 767, 777, 787, Boeing Business Jet (BBJ) |
Services | Maintenance, training |
Revenue | ![]() |
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Total assets | ![]() |
Total equity | ![]() |
Number of employees | ![]() |
Parent | The Boeing Company |
Website | boeing |
Footnotes / references [6] |
Boeing Commercial Airplanes (BCA) is a division of The Boeing Company. It designs, assembles, markets, and sells jet airliners and business jets (Boeing Business Jets), and also provides product-related maintenance and training to customers worldwide.[7] BCA operates out of its division headquarters in Renton, Washington, and has more than a dozen engineering, manufacturing, and assembly facilities located throughout the United States and internationally.[6] It includes the assets of the Douglas Aircraft division of the former McDonnell Douglas Corporation, which merged with Boeing in 1997.[8] As of the end of 2021, BCA employed about 35,926 people.[9]
Boeing Commercial Airplanes (BCA) is organized as:
BCA subsidiaries:
In November 2016, Boeing announced that Ray Conner would step down immediately as BCA's president and CEO.[16] He was succeeded by Kevin G. McAllister,[17] who was the first outside recruitment in BCA history. McAllister was instructed by Dennis Muilenburg to triple revenue from aftermarket services from $15 billion to a target of $50 billion over 10 years, with a new purpose-built unit headed by Stan Deal.[16] Keith Leverkuhn was the vice president and general manager of the 737 MAX program in March 2017 when it received certification.[18]
McAllister was eventually ousted by Boeing in October 2019, in the midst of a company crisis following two fatal crashes of its 737 MAX jets. Stan Deal succeeded him in both of his positions.[19][20] One insider called McAllister a "scapegoat" as he had only joined BCA during the later stages of the 737 MAX's development.[19]
For all models sold beginning with the Boeing 707 in 1957, except the Boeing 720, Boeing's naming system for commercial airliners has taken the form of 7X7 (X representing a number). All model designations from 707 through 787 have been assigned, leaving 797 as the only 7X7 model name not assigned to a product.
For models 707 to 777, the full model number consists of an airplane's model number, for example, 707 or 747, followed by a hyphen and three digits that represent the series within the model, for example, 707-320 or 747-400. In aviation circles, a more specific model designation is sometimes used where the last two digits of the series designator are replaced by the two-digit, alpha-numeric Boeing customer code, for example, 747-121, representing a 747-100 originally ordered by Pan American World Airways (Boeing customer code 21) or 737-7H4, representing a 737-700 originally ordered by Southwest Airlines (Boeing customer code H4). Codes do not change for aircraft transferred from one airline to another. Unlike other models, the 787 uses a single digit to designate the series, for example, 787-8. This convention was followed in the development of the newest version of the 747, the 747-8, along with the 737 MAX and 777X series.
Additional letters are sometimes appended to the model name as a suffix, including "ER" to designate an "extended range" version, such as the 777-300ER, or "LR" to designate a "long range" version, for example 777-200LR. Other suffix designators include "F" for "freighter" (747-400F), "C" for "convertible" aircraft that can be converted between a passenger and freighter configuration (727-100C), "SR" or "D" for "short range" and "domestic" (747-400D, 747SR), and "M" for "combi" aircraft that are configured to carry both passengers and freight at the same time (757-200M, 747-400M). Passenger aircraft that are originally manufactured as passenger aircraft and later converted to freighter configuration by Boeing carry the suffix "BCF" designating a Boeing converted freighter (747-400BCF).
Aircraft model | Number built[21] | Description | Capacity | First flight | Variants in production | Out-of-production variants |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
737 | 10,906 | Twin‑engine, single aisle, short- to medium-range narrow-body | 85–215 | April 9, 1967 | 737 MAX, BBJ, 737 AEW&C, P-8 | 100, 200, 200C/Adv, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700, 700ER, 800, 900, 900ER, C-40 |
747 | 1,568 | Heavy, four‑engine, partial double deck, twin–aisle main deck, single–aisle upper deck, medium- to long-range widebody | 467–605 | February 9, 1969 | 8F | 100, 100SR/B, 200, 200F/C, 200M, SP, 300, 300M/SR, 400, 400M/D/F/ER/ERF, 8I, VC-25, E-4, YAL-1 |
767 | 1,240 | Heavy, twin-engine, twin aisle, medium- to long-range widebody | 180–375 | September 26, 1981 | 300F, KC-767, KC-46, E-767 | 200, 200ER, 300, 300ER, 400ER[22] |
777 | 1,678 | Heavy, twin-engine, twin aisle, medium- to long-range, ultra long-range (200LR), widebody | 301–550 | June 12, 1994 | BBJ, Freighter[23] | 200, 200ER, 200LR, 300, 300ER |
787 | 1,006 | Heavy, twin-engine, twin aisle, long-range widebody | 210–330[24] | December 15, 2009 | 8, 9,[25] 10, BBJ[26] |
Expected EIS |
Type | Description | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
2023 | 777X | New 777 series, with the lengthened 777-9X, and extra-long-range 777-8X. New engine and new composite wings with folding wingtips | Revealed 03/2019 |
2025-2027 | Boeing NMA | Middle of the market, between the 737 MAX and the 787 Dreamliner, also meant to replace aging 757s and 767s | |
after 2030 | Y1/737RS | Boeing 737 replacement |
The table below lists only airliners from the jet era.
Aircraft | Orders | Deliveries | Unfilled |
---|---|---|---|
707 | 865 | 865 | — |
717-200 | 155 | 155 | — |
720 | 154 | 154 | — |
727 | 1,832 | 1,832 | — |
737 Original | 15,068 | 15,068 | — |
737 Classic | 1,988 | 1,988 | — |
737 NG | 7,124 | 7,088 | 36 |
737 MAX | 4,821 | 686 | 4,135 |
747 | 1,424 | 1,424 | — |
747-8 | 155 | 149 | 6 |
757 | 1,050 | 1,050 | — |
767 | 1,346 | 1,240 | 106 |
777 | 2,100 | 1,679 | 421 |
777X | 334 | — | 334 |
787 | 1,490 | 1006 | 484 |
Totals | 25,512 | 19,564 | 5,948 |
Data from Boeing through end of December 2021[27][28]
Aircraft model |
Number built |
Notes |
---|---|---|
1 | 2 | |
6 | 1 | |
6D | 2 | |
7 | 1 | |
8 | 1 | |
40 | 84 | |
64 | 1 | |
80 | 16 | |
81 | 2 | |
95 | 25 | |
200 Monomail | 1 | Converted into the 8-passenger Model 221A |
203 | 7 | |
204 | 7 | |
221 Monomail | 1 | Converted into the 8-passenger Model 221A |
247 | 75 | |
307 Stratoliner | 10 | |
314 Clipper | 12 | |
367-80 | 1 | |
377 Stratocruiser | 56 | Civil development of the military C-97 |
707 | 865 | |
720 | 154 | Modified variant of the 707 |
717 | 156 | Originally developed by McDonnell Douglas as the MD-95: an evolution of the DC-9 family. |
727 | 1,832 | Three-engine narrow-body jet |
757 | 1,050 | Narrow-body twin-engine jet |
Airlines commonly order aircraft with special features or options, but Boeing builds certain models specifically for a particular customer.
McDonnell Douglas Corporation's (NYSE: MD) shareholders voted today to approve the merger with The Boeing Company (NYSE: BA).
![]() | Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boeing Commercial Airplanes.
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