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Boeing 767-200ER

Boeing 767
A side/underneath view of a Boeing 767-300 in Delta Air Lines' white, blue and red color during climbout.  The main undercarriage doors are retracting.
Delta Air Lines Boeing 767-300 taking off
Role Wide-body jet airliner
National origin United States
Manufacturer Boeing Commercial Airplanes
First flight September 26, 1981 (1981-09-26)
Introduction September 8, 1982 with United Airlines
Status In service
Primary users Delta Air Lines
UPS Airlines
American Airlines
All Nippon Airways
Produced 1981–present
Number built 1,098 through March 2017
Unit cost
767-300ER: US$185.8 million (2013)
767-300F: US$188.0 million (2013)
Variants
External images
Flight International cutaway diagrams
Boeing 757/767
Boeing 767-400ER

The Boeing 767 is a mid- to large-size, long-range, wide-body twin-engine jet airliner built by Boeing Commercial Airplanes. It was Boeing's first wide-body twinjet and its first airliner with a two-crew glass cockpit. The aircraft has two turbofan engines, a conventional tail, and, for reduced aerodynamic drag, a supercritical wing design. Designed as a smaller wide-body airliner than earlier aircraft such as the 747, the 767 has seating capacity for 181 to 375 people, and a design range of 3,850 to 6,385 nautical miles (7,130 to 11,825 km), depending on variant. Development of the 767 occurred in tandem with a narrow-body twinjet, the 757, resulting in shared design features which allow pilots to obtain a common type rating to operate both aircraft.

The 767 is produced in three fuselage lengths. The original 767-200 entered service in 1982, followed by the 767-300 in 1986 and the 767-400ER, an extended-range (ER) variant, in 2000. The extended-range 767-200ER and 767-300ER models entered service in 1984 and 1988, respectively, while a production freighter version, the 767-300F, debuted in 1995. Conversion programs have modified passenger 767-200 and 767-300 series aircraft for cargo use, while military derivatives include the E-767 surveillance aircraft, the KC-767 and KC-46 aerial tankers, and VIP transports. Engines featured on the 767 include the General Electric CF6, Pratt & Whitney JT9D and PW4000, and Rolls-Royce RB211 turbofans.


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