What was so special about the Concorde?
What was so special about the Concorde? Concorde used the most powerful pure jet engines flying commercially. The Aircraft's four engines took advantage of what is known as 'reheat' technology, adding fuel to the final stage of the engine, which produced the extra power required for take-off and the transition to supersonic flight.
What celebrities flew on the Concorde?
Concorde was also popular with the Queen and celebrities. Joan Collins travelled with the aircraft so frequently that she became something of an ambassador for the service. Other notable passengers included Elton John, Mick Jagger, Elizabeth Taylor and Sean Connery.
Did Concorde ever make money?
Concorde service was profitable by the late 1980s and if not for the economic downturn and Air France Concorde crash of 2000, may have survived to this day. Concorde earned £500 million for British Airways after tax profit, this was between a loss making 1982 and a highly profitable 2000 with just seven aircraft.
What are some unique facts about the Concorde?
Concorde guzzled a staggering 25,629 litres of fuel per hour. Over one million bottles of champagne have been consumed on Concorde passenger flights. More than 2.5 million passengers have flown supersonically on British Airways Concorde since 1976.
What could the Concorde fly faster than?
The world-famous Concorde was developed in the 70s as a very high-speed passenger plane to do just this, able to fly from London to New York, faster than the speed of sound, in just under 4 hours! It's one of those moments in the history of physics that stands out!
Why was Concorde really grounded?
The jet only had to fly at 50% capacity to break even. The plane was grounded after an accident shortly after takeoff in July of 2000 that killed all 109 people on board and four people on the ground. The official investigation blamed a titanium strip that fell from a Continental plane minutes earlier.
Why was the Concorde so complicated?
It was designed to fly faster than any other commercial airliner in history, reaching speeds of up to Mach 2.0 (twice the speed of sound). This meant that it needed an incredibly complex system for controlling its engines and systems during flight. Who has ever flew with Concorde?
Is A Concorde Faster Than A Bullet?
The short answer is no. While the Concorde was undoubtedly fast, reaching speeds of up to Mach 2.04 (1,354 mph or 2,180 km/h), it fell short of the blistering speeds of a bullet.
How many accidents did Concorde have?
On 25 July 2000, Air France Flight 4590, a Concorde passenger jet on an international charter flight from Paris to New York, crashed shortly after takeoff, killing all 109 people on board and four on the ground. It was the only fatal Concorde accident during its 27-year operational history.
Will the Concorde ever fly again?
Technical, financial, and regulatory hurdles make a return to the skies extremely unlikely. Concorde is an aircraft that captures the imagination and is instantly recognizable even to non-aviation fanatics.
How safe was the Concorde?
Aircraft safety are often tracked with fatal accidents per flight. This is a valid metric because most plane accidents, esp. fatal ones, occur on take off phase or landing phase, one of each per flight. On that metric the Concorde was the safest plane for many years with no fatal accidents from about 1976 to 2000.
What will replace the Concorde?
Boom Supersonic, the US plane manufacturer, plans to have the answer with its new Overture jet, which is set to transport customers at twice the speed of today's fastest commercial aircraft, and is regarded as the new Concorde.
Did Concorde create a sonic boom?
The Concorde carried out supersonic flights until 2003, when it was retired. Also, because the plane flew faster than the speed of sound, it created a sonic boom, an explosive noise caused by shock waves that were a nuisance to people on the ground.
How many Concordes are left?
Concorde is sadly no longer flying, but it is still possible to visit some of the remaining 18 airframes, there are others not open to the public but you can still see them.
How much was a ticket on Concorde?
Such speed didn't come cheap, though: A transatlantic flight required the high-maintenance aircraft to gulp jet fuel at the rate of one ton per seat, and the average round-trip price was $12,000.
Why is the nose of a Concorde pointing down?
Droop nose Concorde had a very high angle of attack during landing, which meant that a fixed streamlined nose wouldn't allow the pilots to see the runway. The engineers fixed this problem by designing a drooping nose that could be adjusted during different stages of the flight.
Why is supersonic flight banned?
Fifty years ago, the federal government banned all civilian supersonic flights over land. The rule prohibits non-military aircraft from flying faster than sound so their resulting sonic booms won't startle the public below or concern them about potential property damage.