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Why the Boeing 777 has such large engines
The Boeing 777 is an enormous aircraft, and nearly all of its variants have a higher maximum takeoff weight (545,000 lbs - 766,000 lbs) than an Airbus A340-200 or A340-300 (606,000 lbs - 610,000 lbs).
A heavily modified Boeing 777 -200ER formerly operated by Japan Air Lines will soon become NASA’s largest flying science ...
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NASA adds a 777 research jet that hauls 75,000 lb of instruments at 43,000 ft
On April 22, a Boeing 777 wearing NASA’s blue-and-white livery touched down at Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia, ...
DUBAI, UAE, Nov. 17, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- GE Aerospace (NYSE: GE) and Emirates today announced an agreement for 130 GE9X engines to power 65 additional Boeing 777-9 aircraft, bringing the airline's ...
The latest iteration of the iconic Boeing 777 series is almost upon us. Boeing went to great lengths just to get a bit more ...
The first Boeing 777-8F freighter emerged briefly for the first time from the company’s Everett production facility on April 23 as it was transferred between buildings to begin final completion, ...
Based on the most successful twin-aisle airplane ever, the 777, and with advanced technologies from the 787 Dreamliner family ...
These design features are not just aesthetic.
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