Golden jubilee of the supersonic airliner

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13
Mar

Concorde Day

50 years ago this month the world’s first supersonic passenger plane had her maiden flight. Concorde was a joint project of Great Britain and France. In her 27 years of service, over 2.5 million people enjoyed an unforgettable flight experience on this elegant plane.

 

British Airways Concorde. Credit: Jane Carnall
British Airways Concorde. Credit: Jane Carnall

 

Faster than a rifle bullet, the supersonic airliner was able to overtake the sun and allowed the passengers to see from her windows the curvature of the Earth. Aircraft flew twice the speed of sound, allowing it to cover one mile in just 2.75 seconds. Long before the Internet would shrink our world, Concorde made it smaller with a flight from London Heathrow to New York taking under three and a half hours, instead of the usual 8 hours.

 

Air France Concorde at the Auto & Technik Museum Sinsheim, Germany. Credit: Astrohans
Air France Concorde at the Auto & Technik Museum Sinsheim, Germany. Credit: Astrohans

 

Concorde’s pointed nose was its most distinctive feature, which used to droop downwards during take-off.  The 203-foot long and 37-foot high aircraft could carry 100 passengers, 9 crew members and 1,300 pounds of cargo up to 3,740 miles at cruising speed of 1,336 mph to an altitude of 55,000 feet. The standard cost of a one-way ticket from London to New York was 4,350 GBP and up to 8,292 GBP for a return ticket.

 

Static Concorde at Manchester Airport. Credit: Brian Burke
Static Concorde at Manchester Airport. Credit: Brian Burke

 

Only 20 of this most advanced aircraft were built over a 15-year period. 14 Concordes entered airline service while the other six included two prototypes, two pre-production models and two “first off the line” production models.

 

Concorde locations in Great Britain. Credit: Mail Online
Concorde locations in Great Britain. Credit: Mail Online

 

Concorde 211 was used as a spare-parts source after 1982 and scrapped in 1994. Concorde 203 was destroyed in an air crash outside Paris, France on 25th July 2000. Out of 18 remaining Concorde jets, kept in museums or hangars, seven are in Britain:

  • Concorde 002 is now resting at the Fleet Air Arm Museum, Yeovilton, Somerset, England.
  • Concorde 101 is now resting at the Imperial War Museum, Duxford, Cambridge, England.
  • Concorde 202 is now resting at the Brooklands Museum, Weybridge, Surrey, England.
  • Concorde 204 – G-BOAC “Alpha Charlie” is now resting at Manchester Airport, England, where visitors can tour and board the jet.
  • Concorde 206 – G-BOAA “Alpha Alpha” is now resting at the National Museum of Flight, East Lothian, Scotland, where visitors can tour and board the jet.
  • Concorde 208 – G-BOAB “Alpha Brave” is now resting at Heathrow Airport, London, England. Sited near Runway 27L, it is not accessible to the public but can be seen by passengers at the airport.
  • Concorde 216 – G-BOAF “Alpha Foxtrot” is now resting at Aerospace Bristol as a major display, in Bristol, England. Previously, it was rested at Filton Airport, the birthplace of the Concorde 002.

 

Concorde the supersonic airliner (2010). Credit: Erich Westendarp
Concorde the supersonic airliner. Credit: Erich Westendarp

 

Others can be found either in France, Germany, or the Americas:

 

Concorde aviation day nose droop. Credit: Brooklands Museum
Concorde aviation day nose droop. Credit: Brooklands Museum

 

In 1964 the British Aircraft Corporation’s experimental ‘mini-Concorde’, known as the BAC 221, made its first flight from Filton in Bristol, with test flights taking place in the Bordeaux region in France.

On 19th September 1968 Concorde 002 (G-BSST), which was the first British assembled aircraft, was rolled out of the hangar at Filton, Bristol.

 

Tupolev TU-144 (SST). Credit: Clipper Arctic
Tupolev TU-144 (SST). Credit: Clipper Arctic

 

Two months before the first Concorde flight, on 31st December 1968 the Soviets built supersonic aircraft Tupolev TU-144 (SST) flew for the first time from Zhukovsky Airport near Moscow.

 

Neil Armstrong (left), the first man on the moon, with Andrei Tupolev (right) in 1970. A photo from the exhibition "Tupolev – Person and Planes" (2018). Credit: Culture Russia
Neil Armstrong (left), the first man on the moon, with Andrei Tupolev (right) in 1970. A photo from the exhibition "Tupolev – Person and Planes" (2018). Credit: Culture Russia

 

The Soviets built sixteen Tupolev TU-144; fourteen of them been airworthy while two others been prototypes. Along with some engine problems, the noise inside the plane did not allow the passengers to have a conversation, making them pass notes to communicate.

 

Alexander Yakovlev, Andrei Tupolev, Artem Mikoyan and Semyon Lavochkin – Founding Fathers of Soviet aerospace engineering (1949). Credit: Pikabu
Alexander Yakovlev, Andrei Tupolev, Artem Mikoyan, and Semyon Lavochkin – Founding Fathers of Soviet aerospace engineering (1949). Credit: Pikabu

 

On 3rd June 1973, during the demonstration of its abilities at the Paris Air Show, the TU-144 crashed, killing six crew members on board and eight civilians on the ground.

Despite the continuous failures, Tupolev TU-144 started weekly passenger flights in 1977 on route Moscow-Almaty. Out of 102 flights it made, the TU-144 suffered 226 failures, 80 of them in mid-flight.

 

Concorde 001 on 2nd March 1969. Credit: Fonds André Cros/City archives of Toulouse
Concorde 001 on 2nd March 1969. Credit: Fonds André Cros/City archives of Toulouse

 

Half a century ago, the Concorde 001 prototype took off from Toulouse in the south of France on 2nd March 1969 and made its first test flight, piloted by André Turcat.

 

First Concorde test pilots, Frenchman Andre Turcat (left) and British Brian Trubshaw (right) in front of a Concorde in Bristol, England, on 9th December 1968. Credit: Dennis Oulds/Central Press/Getty Images
First test pilots, Andre Turcat (left) and Brian Trubshaw (right) in front of a Concorde in Bristol, England, on 9th December 1968. Credit: Dennis Oulds/Central Press/Getty Images

 

On 9th April 1969, Concorde prototype 002 (G-BSST) took off for the first time from Filton near Bristol. The crew members were the chief test pilot for commercial aircraft BAC, Brian Trubshaw, co-pilot John Cochrane, and the engineer observer Brian Watts.

 

Concorde 002’s maiden flight on 9th April 1969. A Canberra chase plane flies beside. Credit: Concorde SST/BAC Picture
Concorde 002’s maiden flight on 9th April 1969. A Canberra chase plane flies beside. Credit: Concorde SST/BAC Picture

 

With both radar altimeters failed and the crew being 35 feet above the landing gear, Brian Trubshaw made an impeccable landing 50 miles to the north-east, at the RAF station at Fairford in Gloucestershire, which became the main flight test centre. The first flight of 002 lasted 22 minutes.

 

Prince Philip with Brian Trubshaw in the Concorde cockpit. Credit: BNPS/Daily Mail
Prince Philip with Brian Trubshaw in the Concorde cockpit. Credit: BNPS/Daily Mail

 

On 21st January 1976, both British Airways and Air France commenced their commercial service flights from London Heathrow to Bahrain and Paris Orly to Rio. They both took off at exactly 1140 hours.

 

Margaret Thatcher and Brian Mooney, chief correspondent UK & Ireland in the 1980s, on Concorde from London to Vancouver in 1986. Credit: The Baron
Margaret Thatcher and Brian Mooney, chief correspondent UK & Ireland in the 1980s, on Concorde from London to Vancouver in 1986. Credit: The Baron

 

British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher took her first supersonic Concorde flight from London to Vancouver in July of 1986. Same year Concorde made its first round the world charter flight with a total flying time of 31 hours and 51 minutes.

 

HM Queen Elizabeth II and HRH Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, disembark from a British Airways Concorde upon their arrival to Bergstrom Air Force Base, Texas, on 20th May 1991. Credit: SRA Jerry Wilson
HM Queen Elizabeth II and HRH Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, disembark from a British Airways Concorde upon their arrival to Bergstrom Air Force Base, Texas, on 20th May 1991. Credit: SRA Jerry Wilson

 

In May of 1991, HM Queen Elizabeth II and HRH Prince Philip flew on Concorde to Washington, DC, to start their 12-day tour of the states. Then the royal couple moved onto Miami, Tampa, Austin, San Antonio, and Dallas. The tour ended with a visit to Kentucky horse farm owned by Will and Sarah Farish.

 

14 Barbara Harmer, first woman to pilot Concorde (25 March 1993). Credit: Gulf News Archive/Abdul Kareem
Barbara Harmer, the first woman to pilot Concorde. Credit: Gulf News Archive/Abdul Kareem

 

On 26th March 1993, British Airways Senior First Officer Barbara Harmer became the first female Concord pilot.

 

Captain Leslie Scott sits in the Captain’s seat, with an airline engineer in the right seat (21-01-2016). Credit: British Airways
Captain Leslie Scott sits in the Captain’s seat, with an airline engineer in the right seat. Credit: British Airways

 

In 1995 Captain Les Scott broke the New York to London flight time record with a time of 2 hours, 52 minutes and 52 seconds. This record has never been beaten.

 

Tupolev TU-144 & Concorde, Sinsheim, Germany. Credit: Paul Sauerbrei
Tupolev TU-144 & Concorde, Sinsheim, Germany. Credit: Paul Sauerbrei

 

On 10th April 2003, British Airways and Air France made an announcement that Concorde would make its last passenger flight at the end of October.

 

Inside the Concorde cockpit. Credit: Beancaker
Inside the Concorde cockpit. Credit: Beancaker

 

On 24th October 2003 Concorde made its final commercial flights, and the British Airways fleet landed one after the other at Heathrow Airport.

 

Inside view of British Airways Concorde. Credit: Deleep George
Inside view of British Airways Concorde. Credit: Deleep George

 

On 26th November 2003, the final ever flight of Concorde departed Heathrow, flying over Bristol and landing at Filton Airfield; thus the beautiful era of supersonic aircraft has ended.

 

HRH Queen Elizabeth II on board a Concorde. Credit: Matsusaka Yasuhiko
HRH Queen Elizabeth II on board a Concorde. Credit: Matsusaka Yasuhiko

 

Concorde can be visited at the aviation museums in different parts of the world:

Aerospace Bristol (UK)

Brooklands Museum (UK)

National Museum of Flight (UK)

Museum Air and Space Paris Le Bourget (France)

Auto & Technik Museum Sinsheim (Germany)

Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in Chantilly (Virginia, USA)

Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum (New York, USA)

The Museum of Flight (Seattle, USA)

Grantley Adams International Airport (Barbados)

But the best thing to do before arranging a trip to any of these museums is a Concorde virtual tour offered by Musée Delta in France.

 

The 50th anniversary of Concorde's first flight (BBC London)