50 years ago, the maiden flight of the Concorde

50 years ago, the maiden flight of the Concorde

Sometime around 1955, the first lines of a supersonic commercial plane were put on paper on both sides of the English Channel. For France and the United Kingdom, the objective was not to fall behind the United States in the aviation market.

In France, Sud Aviation (later Aerospatiale, EADS and now Airbus) and Générale Aéronautique Marcel Dassault (today known as Dassault Aviation) used their respective knowledge of commercial and supersonic aviation to come up with a design. The “Caravelle” of Sud Aviation was already an iconic figure in the market. As for Dassault, it had already envisioned the idea of a plane that could fly at Mach 2 speed, as it was developing the Mirage IV fighter jet that would later be one of the cornerstones of France nuclear dissuasion. They joined forces and presented the “Super Caravelle” at Paris Bourget Airshow in 1961.The plane was conceived to transport 70 passengers at a speed ranging from Mach 2 to Mach 2.5.

At about the same time, in the United Kingdom, Bristol Aeroplane Company contracted by the Supersonic Transport Aircraft Committee came up with several designs, all larger than the Super Caravelle. The program culminated with the Bristol Type 223, an aircraft capable of transporting about 100 passengers at a slightly inferior speed of Mach 2.

Original source : Aerotime News Hub

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