Were times simpler in the sixties, or was there something unique about Joseph Sutter that allowed him to do what airplane makers can’t seem to accomplish now? We can speculate but Sutter, one of the creative engineering minds behind the Boeing 747 gets the credit for taking what was then the world’s largest passenger jet from concept to flight in just 29 months.
“When we designed the 707," Sutter recalled, of the days before his 747 assignment, Boeing wrote the certification rules for the jet. "The CAA, the FAA wasn’t around yet, they didn’t know how to certify an airplane. We taught them how to do it,” before going on to create the domed wide-body 747 that still symbolizes modern aviation.
During a dinner in New York, I asked him why, in the 21st Century, Boeing’s Dreamliner and the Airbus A350 have encountered so many delays and the 92 year old engineer explained the regulatory atmosphere is different now.
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Interviewing Sutter Photo by Patricia Thomas/Lufthansa |
A lifelong resident of Washington State, Sutter was brought to New York by Lufthansa to receive the airline's first Lifetime Achievement in Excellence Award.
I’m guessing, the large framed certificate and lunch plate-sized plaque will wind up in a room already cluttered with similar gifts, or what Ty Swensen of the West Seattle Herald described as the room in Sutter's home that “doubles as an ever-expanding museum of his life.”
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Woelfle, Buchholz, Sutter & VP Juergen Siebenrock Photo by Patricia Thomas/Lufthansa |
"On my recent trip I was treated like any other human being, which is almost inhuman," he said. And as the aviation geeks among us fed photos and tweets to our followers, Sutter paraphrased and expanded on the thoughts of American Airlines' former boss Bob Crandall.
Aviation is a tough business.If you want to make money, go into Twitter."
Aviation is a tough business.If you want to make money, go into Twitter."
Sutter with Buchholz and Kirby. Photo by Patricia Thomas/Lufthansa |
And just when the evening could have devolved into a lot of handshakes and stuffy speeches, the airline's director of corporate communications, Niles Haupt announced to the Father of the 747 that the music was about to begin. At which point, German Korean cellist Isang Enders took to the stage and without a blue print or a wind tunnel in sight, took a night to honor an aviation legend and raised it to a whole new level.