Ship 905 The "Wally Plane"
Delta's newest MD-82, Ship 905 (N915DL), was the symbolic centerpiece of merger ceremonies for Delta and Western Airlines in April 1987. It carried a decal showing a thumbs-up version of "Wally bird" logo, a long-time Western Airlines marketing symbol, fixed just beside the Delta widget logo on the forward part of Ship 905.
"It is only fitting that Wally is going to join Delta on a Douglas plane, because just a few weeks short of 61 years ago, Western Airlines began operation with an M-2, an open cockpit aircraft also manufactured by the Douglas Company." Gerald Grinstein, Western Airlines chairman on April 1, 1987
Ship 915 was on view at Delta/Western employee merger ceremonies in Los Angeles on April 1, and the next day for employees in Salt Lake City.
MD-88s
MD-88s began arriving at Delta with Ship 909 (N909DL) in December 1987. Delta placed its first MD-88 into service on January 5, 1988. The final MD-88 was delivered in December 1993.
Retirement
Delta retired its MD-88 and
MD-90 aircraft on June 2, 2020. An accelerated retirement schedule for the "Mad Dog" fleet was the result of the COVID-19 pandemic as Delta reduced capacity systemwide. Delta had initially announced plans to retire the MD-88 by the end of 2020.
Both aircraft operated across much of Delta’s domestic network and had been workhorses for the airline for several decades, carrying more than 750 million customers during their operating lifespan. As of February 2020, prior to the coronavirus-driven fleet reduction, there were 47 MD-88s and 29
MD-90s operating.
Delta was the last U.S. passenger airline to operate the MD-88 and
MD-90 on June 2, 2020:
- MD-90 flight—aptly numbered DL90—arrived in Atlanta from Houston at approximately 9 a.m.
- MD-88 flight, DL88, arrived from Washington-Dulles at about 10 a.m.
- Final "Mad Dog" to fly in scheduled service was Delta MD-88, N900DE, Ship 9000.