transportation:727
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| ====== Articles ====== | ====== Articles ====== | ||
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| + | == The Rise & Fall Of The Boeing 727 == | ||
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| + | The story of Boeing' | ||
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| + | Mark Finlay - 12 August 202 | ||
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| + | While we can thank the British for taking us into the jet age with their four-engine De Havilland Comet, Boeing firmly put its mark on jet travel when Pan American Airways introduced the Boeing 707 in 1958. The long-range jetliner can be credited with shrinking the world when it was deployed on transatlantic and transpacific routes. Yet, there remained a void in the marketplace for a jet aircraft for nearer-to-home travel. | ||
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| + | Once the Boeing 707 program was up and running, the Seattle planemaker turned its attention to building an aircraft suitable for short to medium-range flights. The answer was a shrunken version of the 707 that could operate from shorter runways that they called the " | ||
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| + | ===== DB Cooper / D.B. Cooper ===== | ||
| == The Problem With The Boeing 727’s Rear Door == | == The Problem With The Boeing 727’s Rear Door == | ||
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| - | == The Rise & Fall Of The Boeing 727 == | + | == DB Cooper Case Could Close Soon Thanks To Particle Evidence |
| - | The story of Boeing' | + | Kristina Panos - January 23, 2024 |
| - | Mark Finlay - 12 August 202 | + | It’s one of the strangest unsolved cases, and even though the FBI closed their investigation back in 2016, this may be the year it cracks wide open. On November 24, 1971, Dan Cooper, who would become known as DB Cooper due to a mistake by the media, skyjacked a Boeing 727 — Northwest Orient Airlines Flight 305 — headed from Portland to Seattle. |
| - | While we can thank the British for taking us into the jet age with their four-engine De Havilland Comet, Boeing firmly put its mark on jet travel when Pan American Airways introduced the Boeing 707 in 1958. The long-range jetliner can be credited | + | During |
| - | | + | In the investigation that followed, the FBI recovered Cooper’s clip-on tie, tie clip, and two of the four parachutes. While it’s unclear why Cooper would have left the tie behind, it has become the biggest source of evidence for identifying him. New evidence shows that a previously unidentified particle on the tie has been identified as “titanium smeared with stainless steel”. |
| - | https://simpleflying.com/boeing-727-rise-fall-story/ | + | https://hackaday.com/2024/ |
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| + | == Is There New Evidence in the D.B. Cooper Case? == | ||
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| + | Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday November 24, 2024 10:34AM | ||
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| + | On November 24th, 1971 — 53 years ago today — a mysterious man jumped out of an airplane clutching $200,000 in ransom money. (He'd extorted it from the airline by claiming he had a bomb, and it's still "the only unsolved case of air piracy in the history of commercial aviation," | ||
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| + | The FBI vetted more than 800 suspects, according to the Wyoming news site Cowboy State Daily, but in 2016 announced they were suspending their active investigation. | ||
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| + | So it's newsworthy that the FBI now appears to be investigating new evidence, according to an amateur D.B. Cooper researcher on YouTube: the discovery of what's believed to be D.B. Cooper' | ||
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| + | Retired pilot, skydiver and YouTuber, Dan Gryder told Cowboy State Daily that he may have found the missing link after uncovering the modified military surplus bailout rig he believes was used by D.B. Cooper in the heist. It belonged to Richard Floyd McCoy II, and was carefully stored in his deceased mother' | ||
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transportation/727.1660540984.txt.gz · Last modified: by 127.0.0.1
