1993 airliner series by McDonnell Douglas From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The McDonnell Douglas MD-90 is a twin-engine, short/medium-range commercial jet airliner seating 172 passengers.
MD-90 | |
---|---|
Japan Airlines MD-90-30 on final approach at Tokyo Haneda Airport | |
Role | Narrow-body jet airliner |
National origin | United States |
Manufacturer | McDonnell Douglas Boeing Commercial Airplanes |
First flight | February 22, 1993 |
Introduction | 1995 with Delta Air Lines |
Status | Retired |
Primary users | Delta Air Lines Saudi Arabian Airlines (historical) Japan Airlines (historical) EVA Air (historical) |
Produced | 1993–2000 |
Number built | 116 |
Unit cost |
US$41.5–48.5 million |
Developed from | McDonnell Douglas MD-80 |
Variants | McDonnell Douglas MD-94X |
2 class seats | 153-158 : 12J@36" + 141/146Y@31-33" |
---|---|
1 class seats | 163-172Y@29-33" |
Cargo | 1,300 cu ft (36.8 m3) ER: 1,177 cu ft (33.3 m3) |
Length | 152.6 ft (46.51 m) |
Fuselage height | 142 in (360.7 cm)[2] |
Fuselage width | 131.6 in (334.3 cm) |
Wing span | 107.8 ft (32.86 m) |
Height | 30.6 ft (9.33 m) |
MTOW | 156,000 lb (70,760 kg) ER: 166,000 lb (75,296 kg) |
Empty weight | 88,200 lb (40,007 kg) ER: 88,400 lb (40,098 kg)[lower-alpha 1] |
Max payload | 41,800 lb (18,960 kg) ER: 43,600 lb (19,777 kg) |
Fuel Capacity | 39,128 lb (17,748 kg)[lower-alpha 2] |
Turbofans (2×) | 25,000 lbf (111.21 kN) IAE V2525-D5[lower-alpha 3] |
VMO | Mach 0.84 (506 kn; 937 km/h) at 27,240 ft (8,303 m)[3] |
Cruise | Mach 0.74 (427 kn; 790 km/h) at 34,777 ft (10,600 m)[4] |
Ceiling | 37,000 ft (11,278 m)[3] |
Range, 153 pax | 2,045 nmi (3,787 km) ER: 2,237 nmi (4,143 km)[lower-alpha 4] |
Takeoff | 7,000 ft (2,134 m) at 156,000 lb, ISA, SL[2] |
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.