HomeGamesUpdatesPricingMethodology
Steam News5 May 20262mo ago

Boeing 747 Debut in 1969: How the Jumbo Jet Changed Commercial Aviation

The Boeing 747 Debut in 1969: How the Jumbo Jet Changed Commercial Aviation Boeing nearly bankrupted itself building the 747. The plane it shipped changed how airlines made money for a generation.

In this update2

Full notes

Full SkyChart: Airline Executive update

Read the full published notes in a cleaner layout. The original post stays linked below.

What changed

0 fixes2 additions1 change0 removals
  • Balance
  • Gameplay
addedThe Boeing 747 Debut in 1969: How the Jumbo Jet Changed Commercial AviationBoeing nearly bankrupted itself building the 747. The plane it shipped changed how airlines made money for a generation. When Pan Am Flight 1 taxied out of JFK on January 22, 1970, it carried 332 passengers to London on a plane that Boeing had bet the company on. The 747 came within weeks of pushing Boeing into bankruptcy before enough orders arrived. The bet paid off, and the wide-body defined airline economics for the next four decades. The 747-100 carried roughly 490 passengers in high-density seating, almost double the 707, with a 9,800 km range that turned multi-stop routes like New York–London or Tokyo–Los Angeles into single legs. Per-seat costs dropped sharply and fares followed, putting long-haul flights within reach of ordinary travelers years before deregulation removed the price floor.
addedHighlightsBoeing built a brand-new factory in Everett, WA to assemble the 747. It still holds the record as the largest building by volume in the world.
changedHighlightsWide-bodies print money on dense intercontinental hub-to-hub routes, and bleed cash if you upgrade thinner markets too early.

SkyChart: Airline Executive changes

addedBoeing nearly bankrupted itself building the 747. The plane it shipped changed how airlines made money for a generation. When Pan Am Flight 1 taxied out of JFK on January 22, 1970, it carried 332 passengers to London on a plane that Boeing had bet the company on. The 747 came within weeks of pushing Boeing into bankruptcy before enough orders arrived. The bet paid off, and the wide-body defined airline economics for the next four decades. The 747-100 carried roughly 490 passengers in high-density seating, almost double the 707, with a 9,800 km range that turned multi-stop routes like New York–London or Tokyo–Los Angeles into single legs. Per-seat costs dropped sharply and fares followed, putting long-haul flights within reach of ordinary travelers years before deregulation removed the price floor.
addedBoeing built a brand-new factory in Everett, WA to assemble the 747. It still holds the record as the largest building by volume in the world.
changedWide-bodies print money on dense intercontinental hub-to-hub routes, and bleed cash if you upgrade thinner markets too early.

The Boeing 747 Debut in 1969: How the Jumbo Jet Changed Commercial Aviation

Boeing nearly bankrupted itself building the 747. The plane it shipped changed how airlines made money for a generation. When Pan Am Flight 1 taxied out of JFK on January 22, 1970, it carried 332 passengers to London on a plane that Boeing had bet the company on. The 747 came within weeks of pushing Boeing into bankruptcy before enough orders arrived. The bet paid off, and the wide-body defined airline economics for the next four decades. The 747-100 carried roughly 490 passengers in high-density seating, almost double the 707, with a 9,800 km range that turned multi-stop routes like New York–London or Tokyo–Los Angeles into single legs. Per-seat costs dropped sharply and fares followed, putting long-haul flights within reach of ordinary travelers years before deregulation removed the price floor.

Highlights

  • Pan Am's Juan Trippe and Boeing's Bill Allen sealed the original 25-aircraft order on a handshake, before a single rivet was placed.

  • Boeing built a brand-new factory in Everett, WA to assemble the 747. It still holds the record as the largest building by volume in the world.

  • Airlines that over-ordered in the early 1970s got crushed by the 1973 oil shock, and Boeing itself had to resell completed 747s at a loss.

  • In SkyChart, switching from narrow-bodies to wide-bodies is one of the biggest decisions in a long campaign across 84 aircraft from 1925–2095.

  • Wide-bodies print money on dense intercontinental hub-to-hub routes, and bleed cash if you upgrade thinner markets too early.

Image Credit: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boeing_747#/media/File:B-747_Iberia.jpg Read the full write-up

Read on the Casey Jones Labs dev blog →

Wishlist SkyChart on Steam

SkyChart: Airline Executive is a deep airline management sim, the spiritual successor to Aerobiz that fans have been waiting 30 years for. 496 cities, 122,760 city pairs, 66 historically accurate aircraft. Wishlist to get notified on the Early Access launch. → Wishlist on Steam

Source

Steam News / 5 May 2026

Open original post

Changelog.gg summarizes and formats this update. How we read updates.