Boeing · Everett, Washington
747-400F
The Queen of the Skies, in the configuration she was always destined for: nose-loading, all-cargo, four big GE fans, and a deck that swallows pallets like nothing else flying today.
Built for the
impossible payload.
The 747-400F is the freighter every other freighter is measured against. A nose door that opens to a thirty-foot loading lip, a main deck wide enough for two 96-inch pallets side-by-side, and a powerplant — the General Electric CF6-80C2 — that has flown more revenue hours than any wide-body engine in commercial history.
Western Global operates the -400F variant in passenger-converted (BCF) and factory-built configurations. Range, with a full load, is enough to take a 124-tonne payload from Anchorage to Frankfurt non-stop. The deck swallows automotive sub-assemblies, satellite components, intermodal tanks, and live animals on the same revenue leg.
"She floats over weight. You watch the panel and you remember why this airplane has been flying since '88. The 747 doesn't argue with the load — she argues with the weather, and she usually wins."
- Manufacturer
- Boeing
- ICAO Type
- B744
- In WGA Service
- 11 aircraft
- Powerplant
- 4 × GE CF6-80C2
- Max Payload
- 124,000 kg
- Main-Deck Pallets
- 30 × 96"
- Lower Deck Pallets
- 32 × LD-3
- Range (full load)
- 4,450 nm
- Cruise
- Mach 0.85
- Service Ceiling
- FL450
- Wingspan
- 211 ft 5 in
- Length
- 231 ft 10 in
- Door
- Nose + Side Cargo
Outsize and overweight payloads · automotive · industrial machinery · livestock · long-range trans-oceanic routings.