N429MC
B744Boeing 747-400ATLAS AIR INC· ICAO24 a51e24· last seen 1d ago
N429MC is a Boeing 747-400, a four-engine jet operated by ATLAS AIR INC. SkyMeter has tracked 1,244 flights totalling 5,820 hours of airtime via ADS-B across 215 callsigns. The most frequent segment is KSUU to PHNL. Service window in our records spans 365 days. Of those flights, 26 (2.1%) carry at least one detected incident — go-around, unstable approach, stall warning, or runway excursion. The Boeing 747-400 has a 196 ft wingspan, a maximum takeoff weight of 910,000 lb. The Boeing 747-400 is the most successful variant of the iconic 'Queen of the Skies' widebody, introduced in 1989 as a technological leap over earlier 747 classics. It brought winglets, a glass cockpit, and extended range that allowed nonstop flights like Los Angeles to Melbourne, cementing the type's dominance on long-haul trunk routes throughout the 1990s and 2000s. With seating for 416 passengers in three-class configuration and a maximum takeoff weight of 875,000 pounds, the -400 became the backbone of intercontinental travel for carriers worldwide, from British Airways to Qantas to Cathay Pacific. Its four high-bypass turbofans and distinctive hump made it instantly recognizable at any airport. Though passenger operations have largely wound down in favor of twin-engine widebodies like the 777 and 787, the 747-400 found a lucrative second career as a freighter. The -400F and passenger-to-freighter conversions dominate heavy cargo operations today, prized for their 248,000-pound payload capacity and nose-loading capability. Atlas Air, Cargolux, and Kalitta Air operate substantial fleets on intercontinental cargo routes, moving everything from electronics to pharmaceuticals to live horses. The type's high cruise speed of Mach 0.85 and 7,260-nautical-mile range make it ideal for time-sensitive freight, while its four-engine redundancy remains valued on long overwater sectors. The 747-400's flight deck was revolutionary for its era, replacing the flight engineer with automated systems and introducing electronic flight instrument displays that reduced crew workload. Maximum operating speed is 365 knots indicated or Mach 0.92, with a service ceiling of 45,100 feet—higher than most contemporary widebodies. Approach speeds typically sit around 156 knots at normal landing weights, with full-flap stall at 115 knots. These performance margins, combined with excellent handling characteristics, made the type popular with pilots despite its size. SkyMeter has tracked flights across airframes and operators, with the largest observed operator.
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Aircraft specifications
Boeing 747-400
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Newest 50 operations of N429MC
