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- In article <airliners.1992.61@ohare.Chicago.COM> ncole@nyx.cs.du.edu (Noah Cole) writes:
- >How many airlines use 747SP's today? I have a poster from Popular Mechanics
- >that was around the arrival of the 747-400 with a drawing of a United
- >747SP and it said that the 747SP set a record flying from Payne Field,
- >Washington to South Africa. Was that SAA? Who flies the 747SP Today
- >and on what routes?
-
- I believe United still has the largest fleet, with the ten 747SP-21s
- which were acquired from Pan Am in February, 1986. They also got a
- -27 in that deal (originally owned by Braniff) but it was sold just
- a few months ago. (One reference I have shows Pan Am as having had
- a grand total of 13 747SPs -- I think they had another two ex-Braniff
- planes but I'm not sure.)
-
- United first used the 747SPs on the trans-Pacific routes. Currently,
- they are used primarily for flights to South America, from JFK and
- perhaps other US airports. There's also a daily SFO-JFK round-trip.
- They also tend to show up as fill-ins on random other 747 flights --
- I have often flown on them SFO-ORD when they subbed for the 747-100
- scheduled for the flight, and I've seen them in LHR as well.
-
- American had a pair of 747SP-31s (built for TWA) acquired for their
- DFW-NRT route. The MD-11 is now used on that route; AA last used
- their pair of SPs for JFK-LHR before retiring them last summer.
-
- QANTAS and South African each have a pair, not surprising how far away
- they are from most everything. I think QANTAS bought theirs for SYD-
- SFO or perhaps LAX, though I think the US routes are now all 747-400
- or 767-300(ER). South African actually owns five but seems to lease
- them out fairly regularly.
-
- After United and South African, Air China (mainland), China Airlines
- (Taiwan), and Air Mauritius probably have the largest fleets with four
- each. I see the CAL ones at SFO on occasion. The Air Mauritius
- planes, three of which are leased from South African, are used on
- routes to LHR and probably other European cities from Mauritius which
- is in the Indian ocean.
-
- Beyond that, the operators are pretty random -- Oman has one and the
- United Arab Emirates have two, all of which are listed as being used
- for Royal Flight. Saudia and Korean each have a pair. Others are
- tucked away in various obscure places which I haven't yet stumbled
- upon, or have and have since forgotten.
-
- Oh yes, it was a South African 747SP delivery that held a record for
- longest flight (time or distance or both) for a jetliner or some such.
- That may still stand but I wouldn't be too surprised if a 747-400 had
- subsequently established a new record.
-
- --
- Karl Swartz |INet kls@ditka.chicago.com
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