McDonnell Douglas
McDonnell Douglas was a major American aircraft manufacturing company. It was formed by the merger of McDonnell Aircraft and the Douglas Aircraft Company in 1967. In 1997 it merged with Boeing. The company designed and built a number of well-known commercial and military aircraft such as the DC-10 airliner and F-15 Eagle air-superiority fighter.
McDonnell Douglas was based at Lambert–St. Louis International Airport near St. Louis, Missouri. The McDonnell Douglas Technical Services Company (MDTSC), headquarters were in unincorporated St. Louis County, Missouri.[1]
List of civil planes and propeller airliners by McDonnell Douglas
- Douglas DC-1
- Douglas DC-2
- Douglas DC-3
- Douglas DC-4
- Douglas DC-5
- Douglas DC-6
- Douglas DC-7
- McDonnell Douglas DC-8
- McDonnell Douglas DC-9
- McDonnell Douglas DC-10
- McDonnell Douglas MD-11
- McDonnell Douglas MD-80
- McDonnell Douglas MD-81
- McDonnell Douglas MD-82
- McDonnell Douglas MD-83
- McDonnell Douglas MD-87
- McDonnell Douglas MD-88
- McDonnell Douglas MD-90
List of variations of civil aircraft
- Douglas DC-2 was the basis for the B-18 Bolo
- Douglas DC-3 was the basis for the Douglas C-47 Skytrain, Lisunov Li-2, Nakajima L2D, Basler BT-67, Conroy Turbo Three and Conroy Tri-Turbo-Three
- Douglas DC-4 was the basis for the C-54 Skymaster, Canadair North Star, Aviation Traders ATL-98 Carvair
- Douglas DC-9 was the basis for the McDonnell Douglas C-9
- McDonnell Douglas DC-10 was the basis for the McDonnell Douglas KC-10 Extender and DC-10 Air Tanker
McDonnell Douglas Media
A Douglas EF-10B Skyknight (BuNo 127041) of Marine Composite Reconnaissance Squadron 1 (VMCJ-1) in flight over Vietnam in 1965-1966. This aircraft was shot down by a S-75 Dvina missile (NATO reporting name: SA-2 Guideline) from the North Vietnamese 61st Battalion, 236th Missile Regiment over Nghe An province on 18 March 1966 (coordinates 191958N 1050959E).
Assembly of the DC-9 and DC-10 at the Long Beach plant, 1974
McDonnell Douglas T-45 Goshawk assembly line, c. 1988
McDonnell Douglas MD-12 aircraft concept
The McDonnell Douglas YC-15 was used as the base for the C-17.