One of my first flights aboard a
Boeing 707 dates back to June 1969 on
BOAC from Boston to London. We took off during a thunderstorm, and as a kid, you couldn't imagine what would happen if you flew in this type of weather. I recalled seeing a lightning strike off in the distance as we flew through the clouds. It certainly lit up the skies. I felt much better after we ascended above the cloud layer and into the crystal clear night sky. The flight was smooth as it was comfortable. All
BOAC 707s were equipped with
Rolls Royce Conway engines unlike the other 707s that were powered by the Pratt & Whitney JT3Ds. Both engine types were equally efficient at that time.
My last trip aboard this magnificent jet was on an
American Airlines flight from San Francisco to Toronto on August 6,
1978, and returning later on another the last day of that same month. I learned a few years later that another
American Airlines 707 on the same flight - I believe this was August 7,
1978 - was on its way to Toronto, taking-off from San Francisco International Airport (a day after I left) and had just gotten airborne when three of its engines stalled and the fourth one idled. The flight crew quickly restarted the engines, bringing them back to a roar where the crew could make the turn and return for a safe landing back at SFO. I could imagine all those aboard almost panicked, thinking they could have crashed into the bay if it weren't for the quick thinking of the crew to return the plane in one piece. The passengers on that flight were placed on other flights. Still the 707, being the first American-built passenger jet since starting service with Pan Am in October 1958, remains a milestone for long distance passenger jet service, and over the years it provided a lot of backbone service. The plane was a real workhorse until its last flight with a major U. S. air carrier, TWA having the honors, on a flight from JFK to Miami in
1982. For the passengers and crew aboard this flight this was a sad moment. The captain was later interviewed after the flight and said it was like saying good-bye to an old friend. The passengers had a field day, stripping the plane of anything that could easily be taken as souvenirs. One of the flight attendants wrote a message with her lipstick, 'we'll miss you. '"
--Harald A.
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