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Japan Airlines Corp’s only remaining Boeing 747 will take off for its final flight on Tuesday, marking the end of the carrier’s fleet of the wide-body jet that has linked key cities in Japan and abroad for roughly four decades.
JAL, which used to have one of the world’s biggest fleets of Boeing 747 jumbo jets, is retiring the popular plane earlier than planned as part of restructuring necessitated by its bankruptcy last year.
Ulf Scanhorse
Japan Airlines Corp’s only remaining Boeing 747 will take off for its final flight on Tuesday, marking the end of the carrier’s fleet of the wide-body jet that has linked key cities in Japan and abroad for roughly four decades.
JAL, which used to have one of the world’s biggest fleets of Boeing 747 jumbo jets, is retiring the popular plane earlier than planned as part of restructuring necessitated by its bankruptcy last year.
Ulf Scanhorse