A beautiful video of the Concorde Mach 2 airliner's first flight - Aviation Wings A beautiful video of the Concorde Mach 2 airliner's first flight - Aviation Wings

A beautiful video of the Concorde Mach 2 airliner’s first flight

Concorde

Regular transatlantic flights on Concorde took half as long as those on other aircraft

The video below, which was recorded on March 2, 1969, shows Concorde 001 making its successful takeoff from Toulouse, France.

The supersonic passenger jet Aérospatiale/BAC Concorde was a joint British-French project. With seats for 92 to 128 passengers, it had a top speed of Mach 2.04 (1,354 mph or 2,180 km/h at cruise altitude, more than twice the speed of sound). The plane went into service in 1976 and flew for a further 27 years.

Twenty Concorde samples, including six prototypes and development aircraft, were created as part of the combined development and production effort between Aérospatiale and the British Aircraft Corporation (BAC) in accordance with an Anglo-French pact.

Only two airlines, Air France and British Airways owned and operated Concorde.

Regular transatlantic flights were made by the supersonic airliner from the airports in London’s Heathrow and Paris’ Charles de Gaulle to the airports in New York City’s John F. Kennedy International Airport, Washington Dulles International Airport, and Barbados’ Grantley Adams International Airport; these flights were completed in less time than it took other aircraft to complete.

After the disaster of Air France Flight 4590 on July 25, 2000, in which all of the passengers and crew perished, the aircraft was eventually decommissioned in 2003. Aérospatiale and BAC’s successor business, Airbus, stopped providing maintenance assistance for Concorde in 2001, which also played a role in the overall decline of the commercial aviation sector.

Related posts

Lockheed Martin Skunk Works Rolls Out X-59 QueSST NASA’s Newest X-Plane

Boeing 737 Vs Airbus A320: which is the better Short Haul Airliner? Boeing 737 Pilot gives Unbiased Perspective

Navy Pilot who took part in F-22, F-35 development tells why most of new US fighter jets have the control stick on the right instead of the middle