The
Aérospatiale-BAC Concorde aircraft is a
turbojet-powered
supersonic passenger
airliner, a
supersonic transport (SST), which flew
from 1969 to 2003. It was a product of an Anglo-French government
treaty, combining the manufacturing efforts of
Aérospatiale and the
British Aircraft Corporation.
Concorde entered service with Air France and British Airways in
1976.
Concorde
flew regular transatlantic flights from London Heathrow
(British Airways) and Paris-Charles de
Gaulle Airport
(Air France) to New York
JFK
and Washington
Dulles
, flying these routes at record speeds, in less than
half the time of other airliners.
With only 20 aircraft built, the development phase represented a
substantial economic loss. Additionally,
Air
France and
British Airways were
subsidised by their governments to buy the aircraft.
As a result of the
type’s only
crash
, (on 25 July 2000), economic
effects arising from the September 11 attacks, and other
factors, operations ceased on 24 October 2003. The last
"retirement" flight occurred on 26 November 2003.
Concorde remains an icon of aviation history, and has acquired an
unusual
nomenclature for an aircraft.
In common
usage in the United
Kingdom
, the type is known as "Concorde" rather than
"the Concorde" or "a Concorde".
Development

Concorde on takeoff
In the
late 1950s, the United
Kingdom
, France
, United States
and Soviet
Union
were considering developing supersonic
transport. Britain's
Bristol Aeroplane Company and
France’s
Sud Aviation were both working
on designs, called the
Type 223 and
Super-Caravelle,
respectively. Both were largely funded by their respective
governments. The British design was for a thin-winged delta shape
(which owed much to work by
Dietrich KĂĽchemann) for a
transatlantic-ranged aircraft for about 100 people, while the
French were intending to build a medium-range aircraft.
The designs were both ready to start prototype construction in the
early 1960s, but the cost was so great that the British government
made it a requirement that BAC look for international co-operation.
Approaches were made to a number of countries, but only France
showed real interest. The development project was negotiated as an
international
treaty between the two
countries rather than a commercial agreement between companies and
included a clause, originally asked for by Britain, imposing heavy
penalties for cancellation. A draft treaty was signed on 28
November 1962. By this time, both companies had been merged into
new ones; thus, the Concorde project was between the
British Aircraft Corp. and
Aerospatiale.
At first the new consortium intended to produce one long range and
one short range version. However, prospective customers showed no
interest in the short-range version and it was dropped. The
consortium secured orders (i.e., non-binding options) for over 100
of the long-range version from the major airlines of the day:
Pan Am,
BOAC and Air France
were the launch customers, with six Concordes each.
Other airlines in the
order book included Panair do
Brasil, Continental
Airlines, Japan Airlines,
Lufthansa
, American
Airlines, United Airlines,
Air Canada, Braniff, Singapore Airlines, Iran Air, Olympic
Airways, Qantas, CAAC, Middle East Airlines and TWA.
The aircraft was initially referred to in Britain as "Concorde",
with the French spelling, but was officially changed to "Concord"
by
Harold Macmillan in response to
a perceived slight by
Charles de
Gaulle.
In 1967, at the French roll-out in Toulouse
the British Government Minister for Technology, Tony Benn announced that he would change the
spelling back to "Concorde". This created a nationalist
uproar that died down when Benn stated that the suffixed "e"
represented "Excellence, England, Europe and
Entente ."
In his memoirs, he recounts a tale of a
letter from an irate Scotsman claiming: "[Y]ou talk about 'E' for
England, but part of it is made in Scotland
." Given Scotland’s contribution of providing
the nose cone for the aircraft, Benn replied, "[I]t was also 'E'
for 'Écosse' (the
French name for
Scotland) — and I might have added 'e' for extravagance and
'e' for escalation as well!"
Construction of two prototypes began in
February 1965: 001, built by Aerospatiale at Toulouse, and 002, by
BAC at Filton
, Bristol
.
Concorde 001 made its first test flight from Toulouse on 2 March
1969, piloted by
Andre Turcat, and
first went supersonic on 1 October.
The first UK-built Concorde flew from
Filton to RAF
Fairford
on 9 April
1969, piloted by Brian Trubshaw. As the flight programme
progressed, 001 embarked on a sales and demonstration tour on 4
September 1971. Concorde 002 followed suit on 2 June 1972 with a
tour of the Middle and Far East.
Concorde 002 made the first visit to the
United States in 1973, landing at the new Dallas-Fort Worth Regional
Airport
to mark that airport’s opening.
These trips led to orders for over 70 aircraft, but a combination
of factors led to order cancellations: the
1973 oil crisis, financial difficulties of
airlines, a spectacular Paris Le Bourget air show crash of the
competing Soviet
Tupolev Tu-144, and
environmental concerns such as the
sonic
boom,
takeoff-noise and pollution. Only
Air France and British Airways (the successor to
BOAC) took up their orders, with the two governments
taking a cut of any profits made. In the case of BA, 80% of the
profit was kept by the government until 1984, while the cost of
buying the aircraft was covered by a state loan.
The United States cancelled its supersonic transport (SST)
programme in 1971. Two designs had been submitted; the
Lockheed L-2000, looking like a scaled-up
Concorde, lost out to the
Boeing 2707,
which was intended to be faster, to carry 300 passengers and
feature a
swing-wing design.
Industry observers in
France
and the United Kingdom suggested that part of the
American opposition to Concorde on grounds of noise pollution was
orchestrated by, or at least encouraged by, the United States Government, out of
spite at not being able to propose a viable competitor, despite
President John F. Kennedy's
impassioned 1963 statement of commitment. Other countries,
such as India and Malaysia, ruled out Concorde supersonic
overflights due to noise concerns.
Demonstration and test flights were flown from 1974 onwards. The
testing of Concorde set records that have not been surpassed; the
prototype, pre-production and first production aircraft undertook
5,335 flight hours. A total of 2,000 test hours were at supersonic
speeds. Unit costs were ÂŁ23 million (US$46 million) in 1977.
Development cost was six times the projected amount.
Design
General features
Concorde was an
ogival (also "ogee")
delta-winged aircraft with four
Olympus engines
based on those originally developed for the
Avro Vulcan strategic bomber. The engines were jointly
built by
Rolls-Royce and
SNECMA. Concorde was the first civil airliner to have
an (in this case analogue)
fly-by-wire
flight control system. It also employed a trademark
droop snoot lowering nose section
for visibility on approach.
The principal designer who worked on the project was
Pierre Satre, with
Sir Archibald Russell as his deputy.
Concorde had an average cruise speed of
Mach 2.02 (about 2,140
km/h or 1,330
mph) with a maximum cruise altitude of 18,300
metres (60,000
feet), more than twice the speed of
conventional aircraft. The average landing speed was 298 km/h
(185 mph, 160 knots).

The flight deck
Concorde pioneered the following technologies:
For high speed and
optimisation of
flight:
- Double-delta (ogee/ogival) shaped wings
- Variable inlet ramps controlled by digital computers
- Supercruise capability
- Thrust-by-wire engines, predecessor of today’s FADEC-controlled engines
- Droop-nose section for improved
visibility in landing
For weight-saving and enhanced performance:
- Mach 2.04 (~ cruising speed for optimum fuel consumption
(supersonic drag minimum, although turbojet engines are more
efficient at high speed)
- Mainly aluminium construction for low weight and conventional
manufacture (higher speeds would have ruled out aluminium)
- Full-regime autopilot and autothrottle allowing "hands off" control of
the aircraft from climbout to landing
- Fully electrically controlled analogue fly-by-wire
flight controls systems
- Multifunction flight control surfaces
- High-pressure hydraulic system of 28 MPa (4,000 lbf/in²)
for lighter hydraulic systems components
- Fully electrically controlled analogue brake-by-wire system
- Pitch trim by shifting fuel around the fuselage for
centre-of-gravity control
- Parts made using "sculpture milling" from single alloy billet
reducing the part-number count, while saving weight and adding
strength
- Lack of Auxiliary power
unit relying on the fact that Concorde will be used for
services to big airports, where a ground air start cart would be
available
The Concorde programme’s primary legacy is in the experience gained
in design and manufacture which later became the basis of the
Airbus consortium.
Snecma Moteurs' involvement with the Concorde
programme prepared the company's entrance into civil engine design
and manufacturing, opening the way for Snecma to establish CFM
International with
General Electric
and produce the successful
CFM
International CFM56 series engines.
Although Concorde was a technological marvel when introduced into
service in the 1970s, 30 years later its cockpit, cluttered with
analogue dials and switches, looked dated. With no competition,
there was no commercial pressure to upgrade Concorde with enhanced
avionics or passenger comfort, as occurred in other airliners of
the same vintage, for example the Boeing 747.
The key
partners, BAC (later to become BAE Systems
) and Aerospatiale (which was later merged into
EADS), were the joint owners of Concorde's
type certificate.
Responsibility for the Type Certificate transferred to Airbus with
formation of Airbus SAS.
Movement of centre of pressure

G-AXDN, Duxford, close up of
engines
When any aircraft passes the
critical
mach of that particular airframe, the
centre of pressure shifts rearwards. This
causes a pitch down force on the aircraft, as the centre of mass
remains where it was. The engineers designed the wings in a
specific manner to reduce this shift. However, there was still a
shift of about 2 metres. This could have been countered by the
use of
trim controls, but at such high
speeds this would have caused a dramatic increase in the drag on
the aircraft. Instead, the distribution of fuel along the aircraft
was shifted during acceleration and deceleration to move the centre
of mass, effectively acting as an auxiliary trim control.
Engines
To be economically viable, Concorde needed to be able to fly long
distances, and this required high efficiency. For optimum
supersonic flight, turbofan engines were considered, but rejected,
as due to their large cross-section they would cause excessive
drag.
Turbojets were found to be the best
choice of engines. The quieter high bypass turbofan engines such as
used on
Boeing 747s could not be used.
The engine developed was the twin spool
Rolls-Royce/Snecma Olympus
593, a development of the Bristol engine first used for the
Vulcan bomber, and developed into an
afterburning supersonic variant for the
BAC
TSR-2 strike bomber.

Concorde's ramp system
schematics

Concorde's ramp system
The inlet design for Concorde’s engines was critical. All
conventional jet engines can take in air at only around Mach 0.5;
therefore the air needs to be slowed from the Mach 2.0 airspeed
that enters the engine inlet. In particular, Concorde needed to
control the shock waves that this reduction in speed generates to
avoid damage to the engines. This was done by a pair of
intake ramps and an auxiliary flap, whose
position was moved during flight to slow the air down. The ramps
were at the top of the engine compartment and moved down and the
auxiliary flap moved both up and down allowing air to flow in or
out. During takeoff, when the engine's air demand was high, the
ramps were flat at the top and the auxiliary flap was in, allowing
more air to enter the engine. As the aircraft approached Mach 0.7,
the flap closed; at Mach 1.3, the ramps came into effect, removing
air from the engines which was then used in the pressurisation of
the cabin. At Mach 2.0, the ramps had covered half their total
possible distance. They also helped reduce the work done by the
compressors as they not only compressed the air but also increased
the air temperature.
Engine failure causes problems on conventional subsonic aircraft;
not only does the aircraft lose thrust on that side but the engine
is a source of drag, causing the aircraft to yaw and bank in the
direction of the failed engine. If this had happened to Concorde at
supersonic speeds, it could theoretically have caused a
catastrophic failure of the airframe. However, during an engine
failure air intake needs are virtually zero, so in Concorde the
immediate effects of the engine failure were countered by the
opening of the auxiliary flap and the full extension of the ramps,
which deflected the air downwards past the engine, gaining lift and
streamlining the engine, minimising the drag effects of the failed
engine. In tests, Concorde was able to shut down both engines on
the same side of the aircraft at Mach 2 without any control
problems.
The aircraft used reheat (
afterburners)
at take-off and to pass through the
transonic regime (i.e. "go supersonic") between
Mach 0.95 and Mach 1.7, and were switched off at all other times.
The engines were capable of reaching Mach 2 without reheat, but it
was discovered that it burnt more fuel that way, since the aircraft
spent much longer flying in the high-
drag transonic regime even though reheat is
inefficient.
Due to jet engines being
highly
inefficient at low speeds, Concorde burned two tonnes of fuel
taxiing to the runway. To conserve fuel only the two outer engines
were run after landing. The thrust from two engines was sufficient
for taxiing to the ramp due to low aircraft weight upon landing at
its destination.
Heating issues
Beside engines, the hottest part of the structure of any supersonic
aircraft is the
nose. The engineers wanted
to use (
duralumin) aluminium throughout
the aircraft, due to its familiarity, cost and ease of
construction. The highest temperature that aluminium could sustain
over the life of the aircraft was 127 °C, which limited the top
speed to Mach 2.02.
Concorde went through two cycles of heating and cooling during a
flight, first cooling down as it gained altitude, then heating up
after going supersonic. The reverse happened when descending and
slowing down. This had to be factored into the metallurgical
modelling. A test rig was built that repeatedly heated up a
full-size section of the wing, and then cooled it, and periodically
samples of metal were taken for testing.
Owing to the heat generated by compression of the air as Concorde
travelled supersonically, the fuselage would extend by as much as
300 mm (almost 1 ft), the most obvious manifestation of
this being a gap that opened up on the flight deck between the
flight engineer’s console and the
bulkhead. On all Concordes that had a supersonic retirement flight,
the flight engineers placed their hats in this gap before it
cooled, where the hats remain to this day.
In the Seattle
Museum of
Flight
’s Concorde a protruding cap was cut off by a thief,
leaving a part behind. An amnesty led to the severed cap
being returned.
To keep the cabin cool, Concorde used the fuel as a
heat sink for the heat from the air conditioning.
The same method also cooled the hydraulics. During supersonic
flight the windows in the cockpit became too hot to touch.
Concorde also had restrictions on
livery; the
majority of the surface had to be painted with a special highly
reflecting white paint to avoid overheating the aluminium structure
due to the supersonic heating effects of Mach 2. In 1996, however,
Air France briefly painted F-BTSD in a predominantly-blue livery
(with the exception of the wings) as part of a promotional deal
with
Pepsi Cola. In this paint scheme, Air
France were advised to remain at Mach 2 for no more than 20 minutes
at a time, but there was no restriction at speeds under Mach 1.7.
F-BTSD was chosen for the promotion because the aircraft was not
then scheduled to operate any long flights that required extended
Mach 2 operations.
Structural issues
Due to the high speeds at which Concorde travelled, large forces
were applied to the aircraft structure during banks and turns. This
caused twisting and the distortion of the aircraft’s structure.
This was resolved by the neutralisation of the outboard
elevons at high speeds. Only the innermost elevons,
which are attached to the strongest area of the wings, are active
at high speed.
Additionally, the narrow fuselage meant that the aircraft flexed
more, particularly during takeoff. Pilots were able to look back
down the cabin and see this occurring, but it was less visible from
most of the passengers’ viewpoints. The cabins of both Air France
and British Airways featured lavatories and bulkheads midway down
the cabin to reduce the appearance of the "long tube effect" to
passengers in the aft of the aircraft.
Brakes and undercarriage

Concorde tyres and brakes
Due to a high average takeoff speed of , Concorde needed upgraded
brakes. Like most airliners, Concorde used an
anti-skid braking system which
prevents the tyres from sliding when the brakes are applied for
greater control during roll-out. The brakes, developed by
Dunlop, were the first carbon-based brakes
used on an airliner. They could bring Concorde, weighing up to 185
tons (188
tonnes) and
traveling at , to a stop from an aborted takeoff within one mile
(1600 m). This braking manoeuvre brought the brakes to temperatures
of 300 °C to 500 °C, requiring several hours for cooling.
Another issue during the research for Concorde was the
undercarriage. It turned out that the undercarriage had to be
unusually strong. This was due to the unusual loadings due to the
high angle of attack that Concorde needed during take-off, due to
its delta-wing. This increased the weight and required a major
redesign.
One interesting note about the main undercarriage is that if both
were to just swing up to be stowed away they would hit each other
and jam. The combined length of both undercarriages is greater than
the distance between both undercarriage roots. This problem
required that the undercarriage be first retracted vertically and
then swung inwards to be tucked in the wing and fuselage
belly.
Range
Concorde needed to travel between London and New York or Washington
non-stop, and to achieve this the designers gave Concorde the
greatest supersonic range of any aircraft. This was achieved by a
combination of careful development of the engines to make them
highly efficient at supersonic speeds, by very careful design of
the wing shape to give a good
lift to
drag ratio, by having a modest payload and high fuel capacity,
and by moving the fuel to trim the aircraft without introducing any
additional drag.
Nevertheless, soon after Concorde began flying, a Concorde "B"
model was designed with slightly larger fuel capacity and slightly
larger wings with
leading edge
slats to improve aerodynamic performance at all speeds and
featuring more powerful engines with sound deadening and without
the fuel-hungry and noisy reheat. This would have given 500 mi
additional range even with greater payload, and would have made new
commercial routes possible. This was cancelled due to poor sales of
Concorde.
Increased radiation exposure
The high altitude at which Concorde cruised meant passengers
received almost twice the
flux of
extraterrestrial
ionising
radiation as those travelling on a conventional long-haul
flight. Due to the proportionally reduced flight time, however, the
overall
equivalent dose would
normally be
less than a conventional flight over the same
distance. Unusual
solar activity
might lead to an increase in incident radiation, so the flight deck
had a radiometer and an instrument to measure the rate of decrease
of radiation. If the level was too high, Concorde descended to
below . The rate of decrease indicator indicated whether the
aircraft needed to descend further, decreasing the amount of time
the aircraft was at an unsafe altitude.
Cabin pressurisation
Airliner cabins were usually pressurised to 6-8,000 ft
(1,800-2,400 m) elevation while the aircraft flew much higher.
Concorde’s pressurisation was set to an altitude at the lower end
of this range, . A sudden reduction in cabin pressure is hazardous
to all passengers and crew. Concorde’s maximum cruising altitude
was (though the typical altitude reached between London and New
York was about ); subsonic airliners typically cruise below . Above
, the lack of air pressure would give a "
time of useful consciousness"
in even a conditioned athlete to no more than 10–15 seconds. A
cabin breach could even reduce air pressure to below the ambient
pressure outside the aircraft due to the
Venturi effect, as the air is sucked out
through an opening. At Concorde’s altitude, the air density is very
low; a breach of cabin integrity would result in a loss of pressure
severe enough so that the plastic emergency oxygen masks installed
on other passenger jets would not be effective, and passengers
would quickly suffer from
hypoxia
despite quickly donning them. Concorde, therefore, was equipped
with smaller windows to reduce the rate of loss in the event of a
breach, a reserve air supply system to augment cabin air pressure,
and a rapid descent procedure to bring the aircraft to a safe
altitude. The FAA enforces minimum emergency descent rates for
aircraft and made note of Concorde’s higher operating altitude,
concluding that the best response to a loss of pressure would be a
rapid descent. Pilots had access to
Continuous Positive Airway
Pressure (CPAP) which used masks that forced oxygen at higher
pressure into the crew’s lungs.
Droop nose
Concorde’s drooping nose was a compromise between the need for a
streamlined design to reduce drag and increase aerodynamic
efficiency in flight and the need for the pilot to see properly
during taxi, takeoff, and landing operations. A delta-wing aircraft
takes off and lands with a high angle of attack (a high nose angle)
compared to other wing planforms, due to the way the delta wing
generates lift. The pointed nose would obstruct the pilots’ view of
taxiways and runways, so Concorde’s nose was designed to allow for
different positioning for different operations. The droop nose was
accompanied by a moving visor that was retracted into the nose
prior to the nose being lowered. When the nose was raised back to
horizontal, the visor was raised ahead of the front cockpit
windscreen for aerodynamic streamlining in flight.
A controller in the cockpit allowed the visor to be retracted and
the nose to be lowered to 5° below the standard horizontal position
for taxiing and
takeoff. Following takeoff
and after clearing the airport, the nose and visor were raised.
Shortly before landing, the visor was again retracted and the nose
lowered to 12.5° below horizontal for maximum visibility. Upon
landing, the nose was raised to the five-degree position to avoid
the possibility of damage. On rare occasions, the aircraft could
take off with the nose fully down.
A final position had the visor retracted into the nose but the nose
in the standard horizontal position. This setup was used for
cleaning the windscreen and for short subsonic flights.
The two prototype Concordes had two fixed "glass holes" on their
retractable visors. The US
Federal Aviation
Administration objected to that restrictive visibility and
demanded a different design before it would permit Concorde to
serve US airports, which led to the redesigned visor used on the
production aircraft and the four "pre-production" aircraft (101,
102, 201, and 202).
Avionics
The avionics of Concorde were unique as it was the first commercial
aircraft to employ hybrid microcircuits, these were a combination
of discrete electronic components and laser-etched silicon
microcircuits. These were produced at the Sperry manufacturing
plant in Bracknell, Berkshire (this later became BAe dynamics group
which remained in Bracknell until the plant closed in 1989).
Flight characteristics

Concorde cockpit layout

Concorde toilet facilities
While commercial jets take eight hours to fly from New York to
Paris, the average supersonic flight time on the transatlantic
routes was just under 3.5 hours. In transatlantic flight, Concorde
travelled more than twice as fast as other aircraft.
In regular service, Concorde employed an efficient
cruise-climb flight profile. As aircraft lose weight from
consuming fuel, they can fly at progressively higher altitudes.
This is (generally) more efficient, so conventional airliners
employ a stepped climb profile, where
air traffic control will approve a
change to a higher
flight level as the
flight progresses.
During a landing approach Concorde was on the "back side" of the
drag force curve, where raising the
nose would increase the sink rate. The delta-shaped wings allowed
Concorde to attain a higher
angle of
attack than conventional aircraft, as it allowed the formation
of large low pressure vortices over the entire upper wing surface,
maintaining lift. This low pressure caused Concorde to disappear
into a self-induced bank of fog on humid days. These vortices
formed only at low air speeds, meaning that during the initial
climb and throughout the approach Concorde experienced light
turbulence and buffeting. Interestingly, the vortex lift created by
Concorde’s wing just prior to touchdown supplied its own mild
turbulence.
With no other civil traffic operating at its cruising altitude of
about , dedicated
oceanic
airways or "tracks" were used by Concorde to cross the
Atlantic. These SST ("Super-Sonic Transport") tracks were
designated:
- Track Sierra Mike (SM); a
uni-directional track used by westbound flights of both Air France
and British Airways.
- Track Sierra November (SN); a
uni-directional track used by eastbound flights of both Air France
and British Airways.
- Track Sierra Oscar (SO); a
bi-directional track used by westbound Air France flights which
might conflict with westbound British Airways flights routing
simultaneously on Track SM, and by eastbound Air France flights
which might conflict with eastbound British Airways flights routing
simultaneously on Track SN.
- Track Sierra Papa (SP); a
uni-directional seasonal track used by westbound British Airways
flights routing from London Heathrow to Barbados.
Due to the nature of high altitude winds, these SST tracks were
fixed in terms of their co-ordinates, unlike the
North Atlantic Tracks at lower
altitudes whose co-ordinates alter daily according to forecast
weather patterns. Concorde would also be cleared in a block,
allowing for a slow climb from 45,000 to during the oceanic
crossing as the fuel load gradually decreased.
Concorde flew fast enough that the weight of everyone onboard was
temporarily reduced by about 1% when flying east. This was due to
centrifugal effects since
the airspeed added to the rotation speed of the Earth. Flying west,
the weight increased by about 0.3%, because it cancelled out the
normal rotation and, with it, the normal centrifugal force and
replaced it with a smaller rotation in the opposite direction.
Concorde flew high enough that the weight of everyone onboard was
reduced by an additional 0.6% due to the increased distance from
the centre of the Earth.
BA flights flown by Concorde added "
Concorde" in addition
to the standard "
Speedbird"
callsign to notify Air Traffic Control of the aircraft’s unique
abilities and restrictions. The flight numbers of BA’s Concorde
flights to/from the USA were 001–004; these BA Concordes therefore
used callsigns "
Speedbird Concorde 1" through to
"
Speedbird Concorde 4". The service to/from Barbados,
special charter flights, and test flights prior to a return to
service following maintenance used the prefix "
Speedbird
Concorde" followed by the relevant four-digit flight number.
Air France Concordes used the standard "
Airfrans"
callsign.
Operational history
Scheduled flights
Scheduled
flights began on 21 January 1976 on the London
–Bahrain
and Paris
–Rio
(via
Dakar
) routes. Then, the route Paris-Caracas
(via Azores) began on 10
April of this year. The
U.S. Congress had just banned
Concorde landings in the US, mainly due to citizen protest over
sonic booms, preventing launch on the
coveted transatlantic
routes. However, the
U.S. Secretary of
Transportation, William Coleman, gave
permission for Concorde service to Washington
Dulles International Airport
, and Air France and British Airways simultaneously
began service to Dulles on 24 May 1976.

Concorde 1977
When the
U.S. ban on JFK Concorde operations was lifted in February 1977,
New
York
banned Concorde locally. The ban came to an
end on 17 October 1977 when the Supreme
Court of the United States
declined to overturn a lower court’s ruling
rejecting efforts by the Port Authority and
a grass-roots campaign led by Carol
Berman to continue the ban. In spite of complaints about
noise, the noise report noted that
Air
Force One, at the time a
Boeing
VC-137, was louder than Concorde at subsonic speeds and during
takeoff and landing.
Scheduled service
from Paris and London to New York’s John F.
Kennedy Airport
began on 22 November 1977. Flights operated
by British Airways were generally numbered "BA001" (London to New
York), "BA002" (New York to London), "BA003" (London to New York),
and "BA004" (New York to London). Air France flight numbers were
generally "AF001" (New York to Paris) and "AF002" (Paris to New
York).
In 1977,
British Airways and Singapore
Airlines shared a Concorde for flights between London
and Singapore
International Airport
via Bahrain
. The aircraft, BA’s Concorde G-BOAD, was
painted in Singapore Airlines livery on the port side and British
Airways livery on the starboard side.
The service was
discontinued after three return flights because of noise complaints
from the Malaysian
government; it could only be reinstated on a new
route bypassing Malaysian airspace in 1979. A dispute with
India
prevented Concorde from reaching supersonic speeds
in Indian airspace, so the route was eventually declared not viable
and discontinued in 1980. During the Mexican oil boom, Air France flew Concorde
twice-weekly to Mexico
City
’s Benito
Juárez International Airport
via Washington, DC
, or New York
City
, from September 1978 to November 1982. The
worldwide economic crisis during that period resulted in this
route’s cancellation; the last flights were almost empty. The
routing between Washington or New York and Mexico City included a
deceleration, from Mach 2.02 to Mach 0.95, to cross Florida
subsonically and avoid unlawfully sonic-booming it; then a
reacceleration to cross the Gulf of Mexico at Mach 2.02. On 1 April
1989, on an around-the-world luxury tour charter, British Airways
implemented a new version of this routing that allowed G-BOAF to
maintain Mach 2.02 by passing around Florida to the east and south.
From time to time, Concorde came back to the region on similar
chartered flights to Mexico City and Acapulco.
From 1978 to 1980,
Braniff
International Airways leased 10 Concordes, five each from Air
France and British Airways.
These were used on subsonic flights between
Dallas-Fort Worth
and Washington
Dulles International Airport
, flown by Braniff flight crews. Air France
and British Airways crews then took over for the continuing
supersonic flights to London and Paris. The aircraft were
registered in both the United States and their home countries: a
sticker covered up the European registration for the few hours it
was being operated by Braniff, retaining the AF/BA full colour
schemes. The flights were not profitable and were usually less than
50% booked, which forced Braniff to end its tenure as the only U.S.
Concorde operator in May 1980.
BA buys its Concordes outright
By around 1981 in the UK, the future for Concorde looked bleak. The
British government had lost money operating Concorde every year,
and moves were afoot to cancel the service entirely. A cost
projection came back with greatly reduced metallurgical testing
costs, as the test rig for the wings had built up enough data to
last for 30 years and could be shut down, but still, having lost
money for so many years, the government was not keen to continue.
In late 1983, the managing director of BA,
Sir John King, convinced
the government to sell the aircraft outright to (the then state
owned, later privatised) BA for £16.5 million plus the first year’s
profits.
After carrying out a market survey BA discovered that their target
customers thought that Concorde was more expensive than it actually
was, BA progressively raised prices to match these perceptions. It
is reported that BA then ran Concorde at a profit, unlike their
French counterparts. The plane was reckoned to make an operating
profit for British Airways. BA's profits have been reported to be
up to ÂŁ50 million in the most profitable year, with a total
revenue of ÂŁ1.75 billion, before costs of ÂŁ1 billion.
Between 1984 and 1991, British Airways flew a thrice-weekly
Concorde service between London and Miami, stopping at Washington’s
Dulles International Airport. The routing from Dulles to Miami was
flown subsonically as far as Carolina Beach VOR; then there was a
very rapid climb to 60,000 ft (estimated at per minute) and
Mach 2.02 that was possible due to the aircraft’s very light
weight: an average of only about 25–30 passengers and fuel only for
the short Dulles–Miami sector. After about 6–8 minutes at Mach
2.02, deceleration and descent was begun into Miami. On several
occasions, bad weather at Dulles and a light passenger payload out
of Miami enabled nonstop Miami–London sectors to be flown. The
fastest such flight took just 3 hours 47 minutes to fly from Miami
to London, with 70 passengers. On such trips, the flight plan was
filed to Shannon, Ireland, with en route re-clearance on to London
secured later in the flight after the minimum required fuel for
London was clearly present. This flight was farther than a sector
often claimed as the farthest ever flown nonstop by Concorde: a
special charter for Middle Eastern
VIP from Washington to Nice,
France.
Up to 2003, Air France and British Airways continued to operate the
New York services daily.
Concorde also visited Barbados
’s Grantley Adams International
Airport
during the winter holiday season. Until the
Air France Paris crash ended virtually all charter services by both
AF and BA, several UK and French tour operators operated charter
flights to European destinations on a regular basis.
Concorde Flight 4590 crash
On 25
July 2000, Air France Flight 4590, registration F-BTSC, crashed in
Gonesse
, France
, killing all
100 passengers and nine crew on board the flight, and four people
on the ground. It was the only fatal incident involving the
Concorde.
According to the official investigation conducted by the French
accident investigation bureau (BEA), the crash was caused by a
titanium strip, part of a
thrust reverser, that fell from a
Continental Airlines DC-10 that had taken off about
four minutes earlier. This metal fragment punctured a
tyre on the Concorde's left main wheel bogie during
takeoff. The tyre exploded, and a piece of rubber hit the fuel tank
and broke an electrical cable. The impact caused a hydrodynamic
shockwave that fractured the fuel tank
some distance from the point of impact. This caused a major fuel
leak from the tank, which then ignited due to severed electrical
wires which were sparking. The crew shut down engine number 2 in
response to a fire warning but were unable to retract the landing
gear, hampering the aircraft’s climb. With engine number 1 surging
and producing little power, the aircraft was unable to gain height
or speed, entering a rapid pitch-up then a violent descent, rolling
left. The impact occurred with the stricken aircraft tail-low,
crashing into the Hotelissimo Hotel in Gonesse.
Others have disputed the BEA report, citing evidence that the Air
France Concorde was overweight, had unbalanced distribution in the
fuel tanks, and lacked a critical spacer in the landing gear which
caused it to veer. They came to the conclusion that the aircraft
veered off course on the runway, which reduced take-off speed below
the crucial minimum.
Prior to the accident, Concorde had been arguably the safest
operational passenger airliner in the world in terms of passenger
deaths-per-kilometres travelled with zero. After the accident, the
death rate was 12.5 fatal events per million flights, more than
three times that of the second worst aircraft. However, no
aircraft’s safety can be accurately measured from a single
incident, and safety improvements were made in the wake of the
crash. The crash of the Air France Concorde nonetheless proved to
be the beginning of the end for the type.
The accident led to modifications, including more secure electrical
controls,
Kevlar lining to the fuel tanks and
specially-developed burst-resistant tyres. In July 2008, a French
prosecutor filed involuntary
manslaughter charges against Continental
Airlines and five persons, and a judge ordered them to stand trial.
The defendants include two Continental employees, two employees of
Aerospatiale and an employee of the
French civil aviation authority. A Continental spokesman called the
charges "outrageous". The trial, which is still pending, has been
postponed several times.
Return to service
The first
test flight after the modifications departed from London
Heathrow
on 17 July 2001, piloted by BA Chief Concorde Pilot
Mike Bannister. During the 3-hour
20-minute flight over the mid-Atlantic towards Iceland, Bannister
attained Mach 2.02 and before returning
to RAF Brize
Norton
. The test flight, intended to resemble the
London–New York route, was declared a success and was watched on
live TV, and by crowds on the ground at both locations.
Another BA assessment flight carrying passengers took place on 11
September 2001, and was in the air during the
September 11, 2001, attacks in the
United States. This was not a revenue flight, as all the
passengers were BA employees.
Normal
commercial operations resumed on 7 November 2001 by BA and AF
(aircraft G-BOAE and F-BTSD), with service to New York
JFK
, where passengers were welcomed by the mayor
Rudy Giuliani.
Retirement
On 10 April 2003, Air France and British Airways simultaneously
announced that they would retire Concorde later that year. They
cited low passenger numbers following the 25 July 2000 crash, the
slump in air travel following the
September 11 attacks and rising
maintenance costs.
That same day,
Sir Richard Branson
offered to buy British Airways’ Concorde fleet at their "original
price of ÂŁ1" for service with his
Virgin Atlantic Airways. Branson
claimed this to be the same token price that British Airways had
paid the British Government, but BA denied this and refused the
offer. The real cost of buying the aircraft was ÂŁ26 million each
but the money for buying the aircraft was lent by the government
(which in turn took 80% of the profits). Subsequently BA bought two
aircraft for a book value of ÂŁ1 as part of the ÂŁ16.5 million buy
out in 1983.
Branson wrote in
The
Economist (23 October 2003) that his final offer was "over
ÂŁ5 million" and that he had intended to operate the fleet "for many
years to come". Any hope of Concorde remaining in service was
further thwarted by Airbus’ unwillingness to provide maintenance
support for the aging airframes.
It has been suggested that Concorde was not withdrawn for the
reasons usually given, but that during the grounding of Concorde it
became apparent to the airlines that they could actually make more
revenue carrying their first class passengers subsonically.
Rob Lewis suggested that the Air France retirement of its own
Concorde fleet was the direct result of a conspiracy between Air
France Chairman/CEO Jean-Cyril Spinetta and then-AIRBUS CEO Noel
Forgeard, and stemmed as much from a fear of being found criminally
liable under French law for future AF Concorde accidents as it did
from simple economics. Further, on the British Airways side, a lack
of engineering (maintenance) commitment to Concorde by
then-Director of Engineering Alan MacDonald was cited as
undermining BA’s resolve to continue operating Concorde from
within.
Air France
Air France made its final commercial Concorde landing in the United
States in New York City from Paris on 30 May 2003. Fire trucks
sprayed the traditional arcs of water above F-BTSD on the tarmac of
John F. Kennedy airport.
The final passenger flight for the airline's
SSTs was a charter around the Bay of Biscay
. During the following week, on 2 June and 3
June 2003, F-BTSD flew a final round-trip from Paris to New York
and back for airline staff and long-time employees in the airline's
Concorde operations. Air France's final Concorde flight took place
on 27 June 2003 when F-BVFC retired to Toulouse.
An
auction of Concorde parts and memorabilia
for Air France was held at
Christie's in
Paris on 15 November 2003. Thirteen hundred people attended, with
several lots exceeding their predicted values by an order of
magnitude.
After the end-of-service, French Concorde F-BVFC was retired to
Toulouse, and kept functional (including engine runs) for a short
while, in case taxi runs were required in support of the French
judicial enquiry into the 2000 crash. The aircraft is now fully
retired and no longer functional. It is open to the public.
French Concorde F-BTSD has been retired to the "Musée de l'Air et
de l'Espace" at Le Bourget (near Paris) and, unlike the other
museum Concordes, a few of the systems are being kept functional,
so that for instance the famous "droop nose" can still be lowered
and raised.
This led to rumours that they could be prepared for future flights
for special occasions. Without the necessary maintenance
organisation, or spares, this is no longer possible.
British Airways

British Airways Concorde, at Heathrow
Airport
British
Airways’ last Concorde departure from Grantley
Adams International Airport
in Barbados
was on 30 August 2003. BA conducted a mini
North American farewell tour in October 2003.
G-BOAG visited
Toronto Pearson International
Airport
on 1 October 2003, after which it flew to New
York’s John F. Kennedy International
Airport
as part of the tour. G-BOAD visited
Boston
’s Logan International Airport
on 8 October 2003, and G-BOAG visited Washington
Dulles International Airport
on 14 October 2003. G-BOAD’s flight to
Boston set a record for the fastest transatlantic flight from east
to west, making the trip from London Heathrow
in 3 hours, 5 minutes, 34 seconds.
In a
final week of farewell flights around the United Kingdom
, Concorde visited Birmingham
on 20 October, Belfast
on 21 October, Manchester
on 22 October, Cardiff
on 23 October, and Edinburgh
on 24 October. Each day the aircraft
made a return flight out and back into Heathrow
to the cities concerned, often overflying those
cities at low altitude. Over 650 competition winners and 350
special guests were carried.
On 22 October, Heathrow ATC arranged for the inbound flight
BA9021C, a special from Manchester, and BA002 from New York to land
simultaneously on the left and right runways respectively.
On the
evening of 23 October 2003, the Queen consented to
the illumination of Windsor Castle
as Concorde's last west-bound commercial flight
departed London and flew overhead. This is an
honour normally reserved for major state events and
visiting dignitaries.
British Airways retired its aircraft the next day, 24 October.
G-BOAG left New York to a fanfare similar to that given for Air
France’s F-BTSD, while two more made round trips, G-BOAF over the
Bay of Biscay, carrying VIP guests including former Concorde
pilots, and G-BOAE to Edinburgh. The three aircraft then circled
over London, having received special permission to fly at low
altitude, before landing in sequence at Heathrow. The two
round-trip aircraft landed at 4:01 and 4:03 pm
BST, followed at 4:05 by the one from
New York. All three aircraft then spent 45 minutes taxiing
around the airport before finally disembarking the last supersonic
fare-paying passengers. The captain of the New York to London
flight was
Mike Bannister.
All of BA’s Concorde fleet have been grounded, have had their
airworthiness certificates withrawn and have been drained of
hydraulic fluid. Ex-chief Concorde pilot and manager of the fleet,
Jock Lowe, estimated in 2004 it would cost
£10–15 million to make G-BOAF (at Filton) airworthy again. BA
maintain ownership of their fleet, and have stated that they will
not fly again, as Airbus ended support of the aircraft in 2003.
On 1 December 2003,
Bonhams held an
auction of British Airways’ Concorde artefacts at
Kensington Olympia, in
London. Items sold included a
Machmeter,
nose cone, pilot and passenger seats,
cutlery, ashtrays, and blankets used on board.
Proceeds of about ÂŁ750,000 resulted, with the first half-million
going to
Get Kids Going!, a charity which gives disabled
children and young people the opportunity to participate in
sport.
BA announced in March 2007 that they would not be renewing their
contract for the prime advertising spot at entrance to London’s
Heathrow Airport, where, since 1990, a 40% scale model of Concorde
was located. BAA, the owners of the site, wanted to charge ÂŁ1.6
million per year to let it.
The Concorde model was removed and
transported for display in Surrey, under the care of the local
Brooklands
Museum
.
In July
2008, defunct British Airways Concorde G-BOAD, which was being
stored at Floyd
Bennett Field
during the restoration of the Intrepid
Sea-Air-Space Museum
, was damaged by a passing truck. Photos
appeared on the airline news website
Nycaviation within hours, and later
internationally. NYCAviation members arranged to anonymously
inspect the state of the aircraft regularly until its return to the
old aircraft carrier, reporting back its findings to the Intrepid
organization. The aircraft was subsequently repaired.
Restoration
A group of French volunteer engineers is keeping one of the
youngest Concordes (F-BTSD) in near-airworthy condition at the Le
Bourget Air and Space Museum in Paris.
Although
only a "static" example, Concorde G-BBDG was restored from
essentially a shell at the Brooklands Museum
in Surrey
.
Environmental impact
Prior to Concorde’s flight trials, the developments made by the
civil aviation industry were largely accepted by governments and
their respective electorates. However, the opposition to Concorde’s
noise, particularly on the eastern coast of the United States,
forged a new political agenda on both sides of the Atlantic, with
scientists and technology experts across a multitude of industries
beginning to take the environmental and social impact more
seriously.
Although Concorde led directly to the
introduction of a general noise abatement programme for aircraft
flying out of John F Kennedy Airport
, it was later found that Concorde was actually
quieter than some aircraft, partly due to the pilots temporarily
throttling back their engines to reduce noise during overflight of
residential areas.
Concorde produced nitrogen oxides in its exhaust, which, despite
complicated chemical interactions with other ozone-depleting
chemicals, are understood to produce a net degradation to the
ozone layer at the
stratospheric altitudes it cruised. It has been
pointed out that other, lower-flying, airliners produce ozone
during their flights in the troposphere, but vertical transit of
gases between the two is highly restricted. The small fleet size
meant that any net ozone-layer degradation caused by Concorde was
for all practical purposes negligible.
From this perspective, Concorde’s technical leap forward can be
viewed as boosting the public’s (and the media’s) understanding of
conflicts between technology and the environment. In France, the
use of
acoustic fencing alongside
TGV tracks might not have been achieved without
the 1970s controversy over aircraft noise. In Britain, the
CPRE have issued
tranquillity maps since 1990 and public
agencies are starting to do likewise.
Concorde travelled, per passenger, for each
imperial gallon of fuel — . This
efficiency is comparable to a Gulfstream G550 business jet ( per
passenger), but much less efficient than a Boeing 747-400 ( per
passenger).
Records
Concorde was the more successful of the only two supersonic
airliners to have operated commercially, the
Tupolev Tu-144 being the other. The Tu-144
was nicknamed "Concordski" by Western Europeans for its outward
similarity to Concorde. Soviet
espionage
efforts had resulted in the theft of Concorde blueprints,
ostensibly to assist in the design of the Tu-144. The Tu-144 flew
first, achieved a higher maximum speed, but was hampered by higher
fuel requirements that restricted its range compared to
Concorde.
The
fastest transatlantic flight was from London Heathrow
to New York JFK
on 7 February 1996 by British Airways' G-BOAD in 2
hours, 52 minutes, 59 seconds from takeoff to
touchdown.
Concorde also set other records, including the official
FAI
"Westbound Around the World" and "Eastbound Around the World" world
air speed records.
On 12–13 October 1992, in commemoration of
the 500th anniversary of Columbus’ first New World landing,
Concorde Spirit Tours (USA) chartered Air
France Concorde F-BTSD and circumnavigated the world in 32
hours 49 minutes and 3 seconds, from Lisbon, Portugal, including
six refuelling stops at Santo Domingo
, Acapulco
, Honolulu
, Guam
, Bangkok
, and Bahrain
.
The eastbound record was set by the same Air France Concorde
(F-BTSD) under charter to Concorde Spirit Tours (USA) on 15–16
August 1995.
This promotional flight circumnavigated the
world from New York/JFK International Airport
in 31 hours 27 minutes 49 seconds, including six
refuelling stops at Toulouse
, Dubai
, Bangkok
, Andersen AFB (Guam
), Honolulu
, and Acapulco
. Concorde continues to hold both
records.
By its 30th flight anniversary on 2 March 1999 Concorde had clocked
up 920,000 flight hours, with more than 600,000 supersonic, much
more than all of the other supersonic aircraft put together in the
Western world.
Public perception
Concorde was normally perceived as a privilege of the rich, but
special circular or one-way (with return by coach or ship) charter
flights were arranged to bring a trip within the means of
moderately well-off enthusiasts.
The presence of Concorde flying overhead would frequently
temporarily halt day-to-day business as people would stop to watch
as the plane flew by. A noteworthy example can be found in the TV
programme
Scrapheap Challenge,
where the mechanics drop all their tools and wave as Concorde flies
over the yard.
The aircraft was usually referred to by the British as simply
"Concorde", whilst in France it was known as "le Concorde" due to
"le", the definite article, being used in
French grammar to distinguish a
proper name from a
common
noun of the same spelling. In French, the common noun
concorde means "agreement, harmony, or peace", and the
aircraft’s name was almost certainly chosen for its allusion to the
collaboration between the British and French governments.
Concorde’s pilots and British Airways in official publications and
videos often refer to Concorde both in the singular and plural as
"she" or "her".
Concorde remains a powerful symbol, both for its technology and
sculptural shape. It is a symbol of great national pride to many in
Britain and France; in France it was thought of as a French
aircraft, in Britain as British.
As a
symbol of national pride, an example from the BA fleet made
occasional flypasts at selected Royal
events, major air shows and other special occasions, sometimes in
formation with the Red
Arrows
. On the final day of commercial service,
public interest was so great that grandstands were erected at
London’s Heathrow Airport to afford a view of the final arrivals.
Crowds filled the boundary road around the airport and there was
extensive media coverage.
Thirty-seven years after her first test
flight, Concorde was announced the winner of the Great British Design Quest,
organised by the BBC and the Design Museum
. A total of 212,000 votes were cast with
Concorde beating design icons such as the
Mini,
mini skirt,
Jaguar E-type,
Tube
map and the
Supermarine
Spitfire.
Comparison with other supersonic aircraft
The only
other supersonic airliner in direct competition with Concorde was
the Soviet
Tupolev Tu-144 – it entered service earlier,
and was retired in 1978. Lockheed, North American Aviation,
and Boeing prepared supersonic airliner studies, but only the
Boeing 2707 proceeded even to the
mock-up stage – the sole American entry into the supersonic
transport sweepstakes.
As a result of a rushed development programme, the first prototype
of the Tu-144 was substantially different from the preproduction
machines, and even these were cruder and less refined than
Concorde, with notably higher cabin noise. The Tu-144
S had
a significantly smaller range than Concorde, largely due to its
low-bypass turbofan engines. It required reheat to maintain Mach
2.0 and cruised at Mach 1.6. The vehicle had poor control at low
speeds because of a simpler supersonic wing design. In addition,
the Tu-144 required parachutes to land while Concorde had
sophisticated anti-lock brakes.
The Tu-144 also had two crashes, one at the
1973 Paris Air
Show
—which made further sales impossible—and another
during a pre-delivery test flight in 1978. Later production
versions had retractable
canards for better
low-speed control, and a 126-seat research version used turbojet
engines that gave them nearly the fuel efficiency and similar range
to Concorde. With a top speed of Mach 2.35 (made possible due to
titanium and steel leading edges) and a cruise of Mach 2.16 it was
potentially a more competitive aircraft – but it did not
sell.
The American designs (Boeing 2707 and Lockheed L-2000) were to have
been larger, seating 300. They were intended to reach higher speeds
of up to Mach 3.0, which would have made the construction more
difficult: high temperatures ruled out the use of
duralumin with design calculations that showed
that the extra speed would have only cut Concorde’s transatlantic
travel by 20 minutes. Running a few years behind Concorde, the
winning Boeing 2707 was redesigned to a cropped delta layout; the
extra cost of these changes helped to kill the project. The
discovery from flights of the
XB-70
Valkyrie that sonic booms were quite capable of reaching the
ground and the experience from the
Oklahoma City sonic boom
tests debacle led to the same environmental concerns that
contributed to hindering commercial success of Concorde. The
American government cancelled the project in 1971, after having
spent more than $1 billion.
The only other large supersonic aircraft comparable to Concorde are
strategic bombers, principally the
Russian
Tupolev Tu-22/
Tu-22M and
Tu-160 and the American
B-1B Lancer; only the Russian designs are
capable of sustained Mach 2 flight and none of these aircraft are
designed for
extended supersonic flight
like Concorde.
Possible replacements
In November 2003,
EADS—the parent company of
the
Airbus aircraft manufacturing
company—announced that it was considering working with Japanese
companies to develop a larger, faster replacement for Concorde.
However, recent news reports suggest only $1m is being invested
every year into research, much less than the $1bn needed for the
development of a viable supersonic airliner.
In October 2005,
JAXA, the Japan Aerospace
eXploration Agency, undertook aerodynamic testing of a scale model
of an airliner designed to carry 300 passengers at Mach 2 (working
name
NEXST). If pursued to commercial deployment, it would
be expected to be in service around 2020–2025.
The British company
Reaction
Engines Limited, with 50%
EU
money, are engaged in a research programme called
LAPCAT, which is examining a design for a
hydrogen-fuelled plane carrying 300 passengers called the
A2, capable of flying
non-stop from Brussels to Sydney at Mach 5+ in 4.6 hours.
In May 2008, it was reported that
Aerion had
$3 billion of pre-order sales on its
supersonic business jet.
Research into
supersonic
business jets continues, as of 2009.
Operators
Specifications

Concorde G-BOAC
Popular culture
Concorde has numerous appearances in the media, including notable
or extended appearances such as:
- The Concorde: Airport
'79 film: Concorde starred in this film sequel in the
Airport series. The Concorde used for
the live-action aerial filming was the Air France Concorde that
crashed 21 years later on 25 July 2000.
- The Concorde Affair
(Concorde Affaire in Italian) Italy (1979) film: Director:
Ruggero Deodato.
- A chapter is dedicated to Concorde in Jeremy Clarkson’s book, I Know You Got
Soul.
See also
References
Notes
Bibliography
- Barfiel, Norman. "Aérospatiale/BAC Concorde (Aircraft in
Profile number 250)". Aircraft in Profile, Volume 14.
Windsor, Berkshire, UK: Profile Publications Ltd., 1974,
pp. 73–113. ISBN 0-85383-023-1.
- Beniada, Frederic. Concorde. St Paul, Minnesota:
Zenith Press, 2006. ISBN 0-7603-2703-3.
- Calvert, Brian. Flying Concorde, The Full Story.
London: Crowood Press, 2002. ISBN 1-84037-352-0.
- Deregel, Xavier and Jean-Philippe Lemaire. Concorde
Passion. LBM, 2009. ISBN 2-9153-4773-5.
- Endres, GĂĽnter. Concorde. St Paul, Minnestota: MBI
Publishing Company, 2001. ISBN 0-7603-1195-1.
- Ferrar, Henry, ed. The Concise Oxford French-English
dictionary. New York: Oxford University Press, 2nd Edition,
1980. ISBN 0-19-864157-5.
- Kelly, Neil. The Concorde Story: 34 Years of Supersonic Air
Travel. West Molesey, Surrey, UK: Merchant Book Company Ltd.,
2005. ISBN 1-90477-905-0.
- Knight, Geoffrey. Concorde: The Inside story. London:
Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1976. ISBN 0-297-77114-0.
- McIntyre, Ian. Dogfight: The Transatlantic Battle over
Airbus. Westport, Connecticut: Praeger Publishers, 1992. ISBN
0-275-94278-3.
- Orlebar, Christopher.
The Concorde Story. Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing, 2004.
ISBN 1-85532-667-1.
- Towey, Barrie, ed. Jet Airliners of the World
1949-2007. Air-Britain (Historians) Ltd, 2007. ISBN
0-85130-348-X.
- Winchester, Jim. "BAC Concorde." The World's Worst
Aircraft: From Pioneering Failures to Multimillion Dollar
Disasters. London: Amber Books Ltd., 2005. ISBN
1-904687-34-2.
External links