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McDonnell Douglas DC-10 : 1970 to date (all models and variants), Hardback Book

McDonnell Douglas DC-10 : 1970 to date (all models and variants) Hardback

Edited by Jonathan Falconer

Part of the Owners' Workshop Manual series

Hardback

Description

The DC-10 was a three-engine wide-body jetliner created by McDonnell Douglas, born from a lineage that included the most popular and important propliners of all time, including the DC-3 Dakota and the DC-8 jet (Douglas' answer to the Boeing 707). It entered service in 1971 and was supposed to be a smash hit, but a series of accidents that were a result of design shortcomings made it a controversial aircraft in the eyes of passengers and the industry.

Despite these setbacks, 446 were built and it became a pilots' favourite.

The Haynes McDonnell Douglas DC-10 Manual includes the story of the DC-10; a full description of the jet's anatomy and its engines; the pilot's viewpoint of what it was like flying the DC-10; a look at the DC-10's safety record; and the DC-10 'in uniform'.

A series of text and photo box-outs also cover the 'hot rod' DC-10-15s for Mexicana and Aeromexico; a comparison with its rival the Lockheed L.1011 TriStar; unbuilt variants - the -61, -62, -63; unbuilt orders - Air Force One; last flights with Biman Bangladesh; and finally the DC-10 in popular culture - novels, films, TV commercials.

An appendix concludes the DC-10 story with a review of DC-10 specifications.

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