May 25, 2007

Simple Characters, Complex Character

The registration an aircraft wears often tells a story much larger than that a simple series of letters and numbers. John Travolta's world touring 707 wears N707JT along with classic QANTAS colors. The Nike Corporate G-V is cleverly adorned with N1KE. The European equivalent is found in 5 letters, the A380 wore special temporary registrations F-WXXL and F-WWOW to represent the sheer size and stature of the Airbus Superjumbo. The 747 prototype still wears N7470 and the 777 prototype wore N7771.

Which brings me to the Dreamliner. It's not known what registration the first 787 will wear, but there are some ideas out there as to what it may end up being.

There has been talk of the tail bearing N787DL (DL for Dreamliner), N78781 and N7871. However, after some research, one particular registration stands out above the rest as a likely candidate. Not to mention some interesting clues to go along with it. When searching for N787BA on Google, there is not a single result. However, there is one very big clue. Google automatically searches the FAA registration database when an N-number is the search term.

So what does the FAA tell us about N787BA?

N787BA
Reserved N-Number
Type Reservation Fee Paid
Mode S Code 52525241
Reserved Date 11/21/2001
Renewal Date 10/16/2006
Purge Date 12/21/2007
Pending Number Change None
Data Change Authorized None
Reserving Party Name BOEING COMPANY
Street 2601 LIBERTY PKWY
City MIDWEST CITY
State OKLAHOMA
Zip Code 73110-2855
County OKLAHOMA
Country UNITED STATES

The first massive clue here is the fact that the previously unused registration is being held by Boeing itself. The second clue is the fact that Midwest City, OK is where the FAA bases both it's Airman Certification branch and Aircraft Registration department.

If I were a betting man, I would say Dreamliner One will wear N787BA.

9 comments:

Matt said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Uresh said...

BA is also Boeing's stock ticker.

Gordon Werner said...

The registration number of an aircraft has absolutely nothing to do with the IATA 2-character code selected for an airline ...


Boeing has used NxxxBA registrations before ... and they will again.

whether or not it will be the roll-out aircraft is anyone's guess

Unknown said...

British Airways is British, not American. :-) Therefore, the registration for British Airways wouldn't begin with "N".

Anonymous said...

Notice that this has a purge date of late 2007 and was actually registered in 2001. Interesting...

Anonymous said...

Boeing has also reserved N787EX.
EX for experimental?

Anonymous said...

Nice guessing. Now N787BA has 99 Results on Google

Anonymous said...

Check out this site for more information on specific aircraft manufacturers, models, and dealers and n-numbers: http://aircraft.thebestwebstuff.com

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