Are you implying that because it's the BBC and Concorde was an Anglo-french creation that they are biased against the TU-144?
Concorde had its faults (and obviously the crash was a terrible incident and the nail in its coffin), but it was a staggering achievement to make a supersonic airliner that worked in a regular, scheduled manner. The engineering challenges that it faced were immense, and I've heard it said (can't find the source) that it was considered by many to be more of an achievement than landing on the moon because it made travelling across the Atlantic at Mach 2 'routine'.
Concorde made nearly 50,000 flights. The Tu-144 made 55. The TU-144 had a significant number of failures, including the two crashes (Paris Air show, delivery flight). I really think it's difficult to see the two as being anywhere near the same league.
> Are you implying that because it's the BBC and Concorde was an Anglo-french creation that they are biased against the TU-144?
Not so much against the TU-144, but to the Russians in general. The eagerness from particularly the US to paint the Russians as aggressor in the last years concerns me. I hear drums beating. And wherever the US goes ...
I am not arguing the rest of your points : fair enough.
> The eagerness from particularly the US to paint the Russians as aggressor in the last years concerns me
That makes absolutely zero sense in the context of the article you were lambasting without supporting argumentation. Rather, it comes across as a cheap bailout excuse for your original comment. What would any US effort to paint Russia as an aggressor, have to do with what you said about the BBC + the Concorde vs the Tu-144? Where would anything to do with being an aggressor, play into that?
I certainly understand the PR wars that nations fight, whether the US / Britain / Russia / China / et al.
I don't see how that relates to US accusations of Russian aggression and the quality of the Tu-144 that the BBC article is discussing. For example, you haven't refuted anything about what the article actually says regarding the plane's deficiencies.
If one were to follow your premise here to its logical conclusion, it would lead to this: you can never negatively critique anything created by the Soviet Union, or you're working for the US in a PR war against modern Russia.
Please keep generic politics off HN. I know the parent post started the move, but completing the descent into off-topic hell is precisely the wrong response.
> I really think it's difficult to see the two as being anywhere near the same league.
I really don't understand why it's difficult to you. 55 flights aren't a success by chance. What you've said about staggering achievement fully applies to Tu-144. The creators were facing same challenges, and had to solve them in the same time - and got the plane flyable, if not efficient and safe enough, to be used by NASA in 2000-s.
We can say that Concorde had less technical flaws than Tu-144, clear in hindsight, but I don't see how that makes them incomparable.
Well, I think it depends on what you compare the two airplanes, if you go after technical prowess like speed or range, then they are comparable.
But if you compare reliablility, security and practicability than the Concord is just hands down a much better airplane. Because a 4% chance to crash with the plane is just abysmal.
> "We can say that Concorde had less technical flaws than Tu-144, clear in hindsight"
It was clear 40 years ago. those who understood the area knew it had 0 chance at being a competitor. was the tu-144 a success? by many metrics yes. was it at all comparable to the concorde? absolutely not.
> "if not efficient and safe enough, to be used by NASA in 2000-s."
I think even the RT could tell you there's been no other way to travel supersonic in the civilian era, even today - Nearly half a century on from the first flight.
I think they hoped to get it out of the door to try things on and then replace with gen-2 supersonics which were no doubt to arrive.
As you know they never materialized due to lack of reasonable economic demand.
I think the sadder story are Soviet high-speed trains. There were one or two, they did some speed records, worked on some experimental routes and never got wide adoption.
Only in the last 15 years there's finally some viable high-speed options. Including one of Soviet designs incidentally.
Seems like there's a commonality with Britain there. We had a world-leading high-speed train design (the APT), rushed into a press demonstration 6 months before it was ready; the project was cancelled but the technology found its way to Italy and then, more recently, back into trains that are now used on the route for which the design was originally intended.
They have a common heritage. The APT design was developed into the FS ETR 400 which was a collaboration between Fiat Ferroviaria (who have gone on to produce the Pendolino, the train I was talking about, and are now part of Alstom) and Ansaldo (who, as AnsaldoBreda, produced Fyra; now part of Hitachi).
Note the ETR 450 uses hydraulic actuators, as do the later Pendolino models, whereas the APT used electromagnetic actuators. (I'm unaware of any ETR 400 having ever existed; the prototype ETR 401 did, but that used passive tilt rather than the active tilt developed by BREL.)
SIG, then owned by Fiat Ferroviaria, built the electromagnetic actuators used by the Swiss ICN and the British Class 390 "Pendolino".
The article misses (although hints at the cause of) a very important difference: Concorde's ability to supercruise, that is, cruise supersonically without using afterburners. The Tu-144 needed to use afterburners during the entire supersonic phase of flight, whereas Concorde just needed them to accelerate. Concorde was a notorious fuel guzzler but only during subsonic flight and ground operation; she was actually quite efficient at Mach 2.
Concorde's largest downfall wasn't technical, it was social. The original expectation was that she would rapidly climb, go supersonic over land, and supercruise all the way to her destination. If this was possible it was reasonably economical.
Problem is that sonic-booms over populated areas are a big "no no." So Concorde was forced to wait until she got out over the atlantic to supercruise, which meant more time spent in her inefficient subsonic configuration and longer flight times.
In 1976 the US actually banned Concorde due to noise complaints. The ban was lifted in 1977 after changes mentioned above.
You are overlooking the obvious problem. Subsonic planes already existed. Even it it was just as efficient at subsonic speed, I doubt if it was as cost effective as a 737, for example.
The Concorde seated 100 people, in first class. If you can’t fly at supersonic speeds, you aren’t going to spend the extra money.
Eventually the bill passed, it has a provision that the FAA should "obtain the input of aerospace industry stakeholders regarding the appropriate regulatory framework and timeline", and report back next year.
Maybe the Concorde would be a better fit for trans-Pacific flights today?
All of the relevant destinations on both sides of the ocean (Shanghai, Beijing, Tokyo, Singapore, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle) are right by the sea, which of course isn't the case for Paris and London where the Concorde flew from.
On most (all?) the round-the-world charters that Concorde did, it had two stopovers on every transpacific leg, one in Honolulu and the other variously in Papeete, Guam, or Fiji (and likely elsewhere, I've not looked exhaustively).
That said, the furtherest north any of those charters landed in the far east was Hong Kong.
Anchorage, Alaska was a more common stopover between the U.S. West Coast and Japan, Korea, etc. in the days before airliners could easily cross the Pacific in one hop.
ANC is still a major refueling and sorting stop for air cargo -- most all air cargo between China and the mainland U.S. passes through Anchorage. The Anchorage FedEx hub is only passed by Hong Kong and Memphis in terms of volume, and the UPS hub is also one of the largest for that company.
That's counterintuitive when you look at a flat map, but not on a globe.
Here's a flat projection of some great circle routes:
Reminds me of something the boss of the company operating a former soviet cargo plane demonstrated. They often figured out how to get the plane somewhere by taking a piece of string cut to fit the flight range of the plane, and placing it on top of a globs to look for suitable airports.
I've heard it's cheaper (whether this is in terms of risk or dollars I don't know) to send up a dedicated tanker to top of a bunch of large planes that took off with little fuel than it is to make a bunch of large planes take off fully loaded with cargo and fuel.
The problem is that's a whole additional, expensive skill your pilots need.
Fuel from a tanker is an order of magnitude more expensive. It’s worthwhile for the military since they sometimes have a hard time stopping for fuel in the middle of a mission, and like using planes that prioritize the ability to kill people over the ability to go far, but I don’t think it would make much sense for airliners.
Correct, Concorde had a range of 3900nmi (~7200km, ~4500mi).
LA-Tokyo is ~4700nmi (~8200km), and polar route flights are generally used by planes with a range around or above 7000nmi (~13000km) like the Dreamliner or the A350 XWB
Part of that was due to ETOPS regulations which required twin engine planes to always be within a certain range of a ground airport for emergency landings.
A modern Concorde would almost certainly have an ETOPS rating which would allow for trans-Pacific routes, which is where the true time and fuel efficiency is to be found in supersonic flight.
Whoops, you're right, it was a quadjet. My memory screwed up because both engines on each side are so right next to each other, in my memory they fused into a single engine on each side.
I'm crossing fingers for Elon Musk and SpaceX rockets.
Sonic booms go parallel to your path, so a vertically moving rocket has a sonic boom that goes parallel to the ground and doesn't bother anyone.
However the big issue with rockets (other than technology which SpaceX thinks that it can handle) is that about 1/3 of people get sick in freefall. (Estimate that I read from the operators of the vomit comet.)
This is lower, however, when you're strapped into your seat. In the vomit comet, you're free to move about, which drastically increases the likelihood of nausea.
The other problem is that the BFR would carry 10 kt of fuel. Even a very small chance of that much fuel exploding anywhere near a major city is too much risk, so you'd have to put them well away from population centers. So you can tack on a couple hours to the spaceport on each end.
SpaceX's vision was a 30 min ride on a high speed catamaran. Depending on details that probably puts the landing pad something like 15-20 miles out in the ocean.
Well, something to consider is that Little Boy (the hiroshima bomb) had a yield of roughly 15kt. Obviously a nuke has different characteristics from a fuel-air explosion, most of which I haven't considered and would not qualified to comment on anyway, but the comparison doesn't make me very comfortable with 15 miles. It probably wouldn't be within the blast radius (depending on how the burning fuel propagated), at least, but the the amount of radiant heat generated would be nothing to sneeze at. I could certainly be overestimating the issue - I'm guessing the rapidity of a nuclear explosion vs. a fuel air explosion affects its pound for pound destructiveness significantly.
Sibling comment has a good point that hyperloop could make spaceports at safe distances more accessible.
Hiroshima was total destruction within 1 mile, the farthest away that glass broke was 12 miles, no damage past that.
So 15 miles is definitely out of the blast radius. What about the fireball?
Google told me the following. 15 miles is roughly 24 km. The mass of air is 1.2 kg per cubic meter. The volume of a sphere is 4/3 pi r^3. The energy of a kt is about 4.184e9 joules. It takes about 1 joule to increase the temperature of air by 1 C. When I put all of that together I calculate that a 15kt explosion has enough energy to raise the temperature of a 15 mile ball of air by about 0.9 C.
Please double check my figures and calculation, but I think that your average city can survive that. :-)
Ha! Thanks for running through the numbers, very interesting. The air in that 15 mile ball is almost transparent to infrared, though, so I'd probably assume that the surface area of the sphere would receive the lion's share, rather than the volume within it. So the energy delivered should fall off roughly with the square of the radius rather than the cube. Might be enough to give a sunburn, if nothing else.
Edit: On my phone I'm getting ~5.8 joules per square meter. Google seems to be mangling the units, though, so I can't be sure it's not dropping or adding in a factor of 1,000, though.
Edit 2: assuming that figure is correct, unless it's released in <1/200 of a second, it's not competitive with the sun at the equator (>1,000 Watts/Joules per m^2 per second)
I think that there are some decimal places missing. But that said, I'd expect a chemical explosion to deliver itself mostly as a shockwave and a ball of hot gas, with relatively little delivered by light. Because the part exploding is surrounded by smoke and chemicals that absorb light.
Atmosphere is only transparent to infrared in 7-13 mkm window. Yet I expect the fireball to producing heat at above 500 C that gives peak of radiation below 4 mkm.
You'd need a lot more range. The Concorde had a range of about 4500 miles. Even SFO-NRT (Tokyo) is over 5000 miles. And if you have to make a fuel stop--probably in Anchorage--you're really starting to cut into the time advantage.
The Concorde was also really expensive. I was able to fly on it twice, once each direction, near the end of their operations. I only flew on it because they'd announced they were shutting down and I wanted to fly supersonic before they went out of business. It was very expensive.
I think it was in '03 and the price was just something like $12,000 for the two flights. It was high enough that I put it on a credit card. The prices had a lot of variation and I flew first class but they had a higher class that they called Concorde, as I recall.
Yes, it was a premium product. But if you're a banker/lawyer going between NY and London a lot and your billable rate is $crazy, it's super good value.
I think there is an enormous market for something like Concorde now, much more than there was before. The amount of super rich has increased massively (and each of them have way more money). I think you'd even see executives using it over their own private jets for the speed increase - which means tickets could be crazy expensive, as operating a jet is very pricey.
I suppose it'd depend a bit on if you could get WiFi on it though. Wonder if that is possible at supersonic speeds?
There are several companies working on the idea. There’s been a lot of work done recently on advanced aerodynamic designs that would significantly reduce the sonic boom for a given size of aircraft. On smaller planes this might reduce it to levels that would be considered tolerable over populated areas.
The silver bullet: Super rich don't make airliners money. Most flights make 80+% of their revenue from business class. First class is too spacious, it's vastly less profit per area. Economy pack you in like sardines because you really do not matter.
Sorry, but Concord was a bad idea and it isn't coming back. Maybe some kind of private airplane for the Elon Musks of the world who can afford to pay their own plane. But a supersonic cruiser just isn't viable.
Your point about WiFi is the real killer. Why pay an order of magnitude more for faster travel, when what you really need is reliable WiFi so you can work from the plane. Then travel time is just a convenience, it doesn't stop work.
I'm pretty sure that SpaceX's BFR in earth-to-earth configuration is targeted at the wealthy market you refer to.
On the topic of WiFi, SpaceX is able to return video from the Falcon 9 on ascent and descent in many cases. So even though the very high Doppler and tracking problems involved in wireless communication to a rocket are not trivial, they're already doing it.
> I'm pretty sure that SpaceX's BFR in earth-to-earth configuration is targeted at the wealthy market you refer to
One of the challenges Virgin Galactic ran into in its sales efforts was the high co-incidence between (a) people who can pay for a super-expensive form of transport and (b) people whose Board, limited partnership or employment agreements prohibit them from doing super-risky stuff.
R.E.G. Davies worked out why this isn't as powerful as you think because the earth is round. The justification for that expensive ticket is that you can have your meeting without getting jet-lagged. So, basically, leave your house at a reasonable time, get to a meeting on the other side of the Atlantic at a reasonable time- that's worth an awful lot of money. If you have to fly out the night before anyway, what justifies the extra money versus subsonic transport?
So let's imagine you live in New York and have a meeting in Paris- and let's say, for the purpose of argument, that it's actually a transporter, instantaneous travel from airport to airport. You leave your house at 6AM, get to the airport at 7AM. Its an international flight, so you need to get to the airport early, so your flight leaves at 8AM. You instantaneously arrive in Paris, but that's six hours time zone different: 2PM in Paris. Two hours to navigate through customs and the airport and it's 4PM, an hour to do ground transport to your meeting and it's already 5PM.
So even with exactly zero travel time between JFK->CDG your meeting can't be conducted at normal business times. So if your meeting still requires traveling out the day before and dealing with jet lag and all the rest, there just isn't that much benefit to justify the costs.
It might make sense for a business jet, so long as the costs are really not much more than a GV, or if it's primarily about prestige anyway.
Yes, but if you are in those jobs then 5pm is a normal meeting time and the folks in the Paris office are going to be there - like it or not.
There are two real reasons this no longer works; first the international travelling class has turned out to be far greedier and care less about their lives than anyone imagined, secondly Skype.
Two points: A) that 5PM was with transporter technology, more realistic numbers push you to starting the meeting at 7PM. B) The reason to do meetings in person versus telepresence is to build relationships in a way that phones just can't do. Starting meetings at 7PM does not improve relationships.
As far as travel versus communications goes, from what I can see improving communications technology places a higher premium on travel than before, not less. Easier for senior executives to stay in touch with HQ on the go, but that ability means that relationship building is now more important.
That's an interesting point. If you're sitting in your office, the ability to hold meetings and communicate isn't really all that different from what it was in 1985. You could email documents, presentations, and have conference calls (at least in many organizations though not all). Today isn't really all that different.
But traveling? In 1985, you could somewhat stay in touch by telephone (but generally not cell phone) though it was easier if you had a dedicated assistant and international long distance was rather variable. And sending documents probably involved faxes. While meetings/flights/time zones mean I may not always be reachable when traveling on business today, it's a lot easier than it was 30 years ago.
Two hours for customs? If you join the Global Entry Program it only takes a few minutes--you check-in at a kiosk and go to a special lane. Great if you have kids. You also end up enrolled in the Trusted Traveler Program, which puts you in the expedited lane for terminal security.
As for the wait time at the airport: if you're buying premium tickets the airline doesn't care how late you arrive as long as you don't delay the flight. IIRC, at least for domestic travel TSA requires that all checked luggage be presented at least 30 minutes prior to departure, so that's the only hard time limit. Maybe it's earlier for international travel, but for a single day itinerary you presumably wouldn't have any checked luggage.
So far as I know, France has no equivalent of Global Entry. It's also not universal advice, even if you were flying into the US- it's only available to citizens of certain countries. (France is not one of them, though Germany's EasyPass is.)
It would be faster to get through the CDG customs lines if you had a Schengen citizenship, since they could get into the the Schengen lines, but that's not really particularly useful advice.
yes its the chargeout rate that makes it cost in, at my first job we considered a charter a plane to take some senior engineers up north for ran on site experiment as our OH rate was 600% the cost of driving vs flying was substantial.
All the gear would have been put in a transit and driven up by one of the technicians
I remember reading somewhere that it was the first time humanity had chosen to take a step backwards in terms of transport speed. Definitely seems like there would be a market.
I did the same in '03. BA released some steeply discounted tickets with the end-of-life announcement; I think I paid $3,500 round trip (JFK-LHR leg in coach, my rationale being I could afford one way and London to New York was an hour more time on Concorde).
It was also noisy and cramped. Fantastic though, it was a once-in-a-lifetime experience and a wonderful thing to have done.
The service was truly first class, compared to other offerings at the time. It wasn't a very big aircraft and the acceleration wasn't as much as I was hoping for. The booze was free flowing and they happily served me for the whole flight. The announcements were informative and entertaining.
That's pretty much it... I enjoyed it but it wasn't life altering.
Was it worth it? Probably not for most. It was worth it just to have had the experience, in my case. I'd always wanted to go and they were shutting down. So, I went. At the time, I could have spent the money more wisely, but I don't regret it.
If you felt the window, it was warm to the touch vs. cold on a subsonic. Outside window was much smaller than subsonic.
The sound of the air passing by was closer to a sizzling sound in super cruise vs. what we hear on subsonic.
Take off had a noticeably faster groundspeed before rotation.
60-90 seconds (I forget, depends on airport) after departing the runway, throttles were reduced and you felt the plane slow quickly and the plane's angle of attack was reduced. This was for noise abatement and they explained this prior to takeoff so not as to alarm you.
Leaving JFK on 31L included a sharp left bank as soon as wheels up to follow the shoreline and avoid populated areas. Example: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8j-3003jtuY
After leaving populated area, throttles were pushed to full and climb resumed. If all went according to flight plan, Concorde would be at .95 Mach shortly and get the OK to go supersonic.
Afterburners. You felt them getting turned on to go supersonic. They were turned on in pairs - one on each side. Felt like someone was gently pushing you from behind.
No turbulence - would fly above the weather.
Landing was like being in a recliner. High angle of attach on the approach. Once down on all wheels, NOISE as the reversers kicked in.
The delta wing didn't flex like subsonic wings do, so any bumps during climb or decent felt a bit more sharp (less bouncy/spongy? hard to find the words). Maybe it was just me.
Other than that, it's the same as a regular subsonic.
Also, they substantially over-estimated the importance of speed over comfort.
Concorde's narrow fuselage made it remarkably cramped and uncomfortable. The galleys were also tiny, precluding the elaborate à la carte dining that is now standard in the front seats of widebody jets.
For the kind of customer that used Concorde, the idea of being pampered in Business or First was often much more attractive than saving a couple of hours.
Today, Concorde would struggle to compete on overall journey time with the A318s flying out of London City Airport. The speed advantage of Concorde would be badly eroded by the Kafkaesque nightmare of travelling via Heathrow.
> For the kind of customer that used Concorde, the idea of being pampered in Business or First was often much more attractive than saving a couple of hours
People vastly underestimate the effect lay-flat travel had on demand for the Concorde.
Consider the time differences between London and New York. An overnight lay-flat loses a traveller little to no daytime. A Concorde, while faster, is less comfortable and leaves and/or arrives at an awkward time for a business traveller.
The major(and I will take the risk and say - only) benefit of the concorde was the amazing ability it gave some people of making a New York<->London return trip in one day. For some businessmen that was absolutely invaluable - they could jump on a plane in the morning, have their meeting in New York, and be back in London late in the evening. No other plane offers that.
Note that this very much only worked one way: Europe to the US, not vice-versa, because of the curvature of the Earth (and even then, better for London versus Paris because of geography). Since the plane needs to be full on all of it's flights to pay it's costs, this was quite the problem and very much a limit on routes that could be profitable.
Lay-flat came to the game relatively late so I'm not sure about direct impact on the Concorde. But I would agree that looking forward any supersonic commercial aircraft would have to compete with seating in standard widebodies that is very comfortable and food that is pretty decent. A transatlantic flight in first class or even business class takes some time but it's really not uncomfortable. Relatively few people are really in a situation where the few hours in a comfortable plane are worth $$$$.
Yes, longer distance flights are, well, long but then you have a whole other set of engineering challenges to do those routes nonstop supersonic.
> Lay-flat came to the game relatively late so I'm not sure about direct impact on the Concorde
Lay flat preceded the Concorde. More than that, it was caused by it. "In 1977, El Al announced plans to reconfigure its aircraft with a small first class cabin and larger business class cabin on the assumption that most transatlantic first-class passengers would shift their business to the Concorde" [1].
EDIT: This is all wrong.
> Relatively few people are really in a situation where the few hours in a comfortable plane are worth $$$$
Business class is where airlines make the bulk of their profits.
Business class was not originally lay-flat. What the NYTimes reference used by that Wikipedia article says is that El Al assumed the Concorde would take away most of the real first class flyers and all that they needed was basically something like domestic business class today.
Business class mostly started up as an offering for, well, business travelers who could give the appearance of being frugal relative to first class while still traveling comfortably. What's happened over time is a lot of dedicated first class seating has gone away and business class has been incrementally upgraded to something that's mostly much better than old-fashioned first class ever was.
> Relatively few people are really in a situation where the few hours in a comfortable plane are worth $$$$
Business class is where airlines make the bulk of their profits.
I wasn't clear. Yes. Lots of people will pay extra for business. I was saying I'm not sure how many of those will then spend 2x or more for a bit more speed when they're already comfortable.
ADDED: This article suggests lay-flat came in during the 1990s which sounds about right to me: https://thepointsguy.com/2017/05/evolution-of-business-class... I definitely remember flying business class transatlantic in the early 90s and it wasn't lay-flat.
My dad used to fly back and forth to Europe in first/business a lot. He told me that he once got upgraded to the Concorde and, while it was a neat experience to do once, he actually preferred the experience on what I assume would have been a 747. He was doing longer trips so the fly to London to seal a deal and head back home the next day wasn't his use case.
(And as I recall it got him in at rush hour rather than just having a nice dinner on the plane.)
The problem was also connected to latency vs. bandwidth.
Since the Concorde was a luxury airliner, it couldn't fly as often as a regular airplane.
If you're in London and you find out you need to be in NY right now at all costs, it may be faster to hop on a business jet or even a commercial flight rather than wait for the next Concorde.
And as first class (and business jets) got comfortable, the need to get out of the air ASAP is much less than it used to be.
If you're ever around Stuttgart/Frankfurt area, there's a couple of really amazing Technical Museums that are sister facilities. One is in Sinsheim and one is in Speyer and are known as the Teknik Museum Sinsheim/Speyer. They're full of really awesome exhibits - heaps and heaps of cars, trains, aircraft, military equipment, etc. Due to it being a late plan, I spent a very rushed 4 hours in each of them and that wasn't nearly enough time - at times I was literally jogging between the exhibits trying to absorb it all. They are really amazing places to check out.
Anyway, specifically of interest here is Teknik Museum Sinsheim [1], which has both a Concorde and a Tu-144 on one of the hall roofs, next to each other. You get to climb up and walk through them, look up from under them, etc. but it's really cool to just look at all the little differences between them. Here's [2] a cool website I just found that shows a side by side comparison of the two jets.
The one that caught my eye immediately, which you can see on that page as well as this [3] wiki image, was that the air intake on the Tu-144 is far longer, necessitating the rear bogies to fold up into the air intake. I can't begin to imagine how they handled that without seriously messing with the air flow (and I can't find any diagrams of the airflow like with the Concorde). Wiki apparently says it was due to design misconceptions on the Soviet side and they were eventually shortened significantly. Also, the engines sit far more inboard on the Tu than the Concorde, presumably so they can get that additional length of intake up the fuselage/wing structure. Alternatively, it wouldn't surprise me if that's also part of its military heritage coming through.
The Tu-144 is a pretty fascinating aircraft, even beyond the story behind its development and competition with the Concorde. However, it's really cool to compare the pair and see the differences because it makes you wonder why they differ in those ways - whether it's a case of the Soviets thinking they should replace/modify the Western design with something better, or whether they took multiple concepts including the Western design and sort of mashed them together. It's truly a fascinating aircraft, despite its failures.
This makes me think of the current book i'm reading about the Soviet space shuttle [1].
They started building it because of military paranoia. They did copy some of the design but it was to be able to accomplish the same type of mission. If I remember correctly, notably polar orbits. The west calls it a shuttle copy, I think it's probably more a design convergence.
Buran was able to fly by itself, it was boosted by modular liquid fuel rocket [2]. The book goes into details about the differences between the two and a bit of history pre-shuttle, programs like the spiral space planes. It's also humbling when you find out that people in the ~1900 thought about going to other planets [3].
When I moved to Stuttgart years back, I remember doing a double-take as we drove down the Autobahn, as you can see both the Concorde and the Tu-144 from the road. I'm somewhat spoiled in that I live near the Udvar-Hazy in the U.S., so seeing the Concorde was nothing special. But there are very few Tu-144s on display, and only one outside the Soviet Union.
In addition to those links, Air Vectors has a tremendous writeup on both the Concorde and Tu-144: http://airvectors.net/avsst.html
The sister museum in Speyer (not far away) has a Buran, a Soyuz capsule, and a nicely prepared Boeing 747 among other thing. If you are going to visit, you should try to visit both.
Yup. The Buran was awesome. They have scaffolding up into the cargo bay and a small viewing deck into the rear to look at all the electronics near the engines. I definitely recommend both, they're wonderful museums with heaps on offer.
Yeh that general area has heaps of cool museums and factories around. I only got to these due to a super cramped sechedule, but I had marked several there (ESA Operations Centre is a bit north, for example) and would've loved to see more!
This 6min video does a great job on explaining the differences between Concorde and Tu-144 and why Tu-144 was so bad at many things. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VFWbuKr5-I8
The standard reason given it failed was the plans were leaked on purpose to the Soviets that had flaws to try (successfully) to make it crash.
I'm happy it's an urban legend, but it was up there with the NN Tank story and the Gas Pipeline story (yet to be disappointed that this too is legend) as a common pre-WWW engineering story.
Why no mention? Even to nix the legend or for old times sake.
Maybe someone with domain knowledge is around here: could we make a spacious long range super sonic airplane today, with our modern tech? Think something a bit smaller than the 747, for example.
Why isn't it considered viable? The world is 2x richer than the last time the Concorde flew...
Right. And for those already willing/able to forgo the cheaper for more comfort (but not much speed), there are already well-established options including lay-flat seating for international routes and even private plane rental.
Honestly, I can't say myself that if I had the money, that I'd choose getting there a few hours earlier instead of feeling like a human being when I arrived.
As one of the siblings notes, there are Boom and a number of other efforts that may or may not ever (sorry) get off the ground. But they're mostly focused on smaller planes--business jet up to about regional jet size in the case of Boom.
One question is whether you can get noise to the level where you could go supersonic over land.
The bigger question is the economic one. Can you operate profitably at price levels that people would be willing to buy sufficient tickets. You're talking about a plane that is basically designed for only first class flyers to use because subsonic is always going to be cheaper. So how many people will fly at a probable premium over current lay-flat business/first for a faster ride in likely less comfortable seating?
> The space race undermined the Tu-144 programme by shifting the Soviet focus towards long-range rocketry and high-altitude missiles, and away from supersonic bombers, effectively forcing the Soviets to develop the Tu-144 as a standalone civil aircraft programme.
This is the key to understand this plane. Soviet goverment considered bombers to be obsolete by rockets. Designers had to pull many tricks to keep supersonic bomber program running.
One way was to develop civil/cargo plane. Other was to call it 'rocket carrier' (long range missile launcher).
I'm surprised that nobody has yet mentioned Boeing's SST effort. It was a much more ambitious aircraft, larger and faster. Prototypes were under construction. There were orders for 122 planes.
Development was expensive, and Boeing was relying on considerable contributions from the US government. The project was cancelled in 1971 amid cost and environmental concerns.
I was surprised to find no mention of Tu-160, which is a supersonic strategic bomber currently in operation. It builds on Tu-144 design. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tupolev_Tu-160
One of the advantages of flying Mach-2 is to provoke the increased wear of the intercept aircraft at peaceful times, or so they say.
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[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 150 ms ] threadConcorde had its faults (and obviously the crash was a terrible incident and the nail in its coffin), but it was a staggering achievement to make a supersonic airliner that worked in a regular, scheduled manner. The engineering challenges that it faced were immense, and I've heard it said (can't find the source) that it was considered by many to be more of an achievement than landing on the moon because it made travelling across the Atlantic at Mach 2 'routine'.
Concorde made nearly 50,000 flights. The Tu-144 made 55. The TU-144 had a significant number of failures, including the two crashes (Paris Air show, delivery flight). I really think it's difficult to see the two as being anywhere near the same league.
Not so much against the TU-144, but to the Russians in general. The eagerness from particularly the US to paint the Russians as aggressor in the last years concerns me. I hear drums beating. And wherever the US goes ...
I am not arguing the rest of your points : fair enough.
That makes absolutely zero sense in the context of the article you were lambasting without supporting argumentation. Rather, it comes across as a cheap bailout excuse for your original comment. What would any US effort to paint Russia as an aggressor, have to do with what you said about the BBC + the Concorde vs the Tu-144? Where would anything to do with being an aggressor, play into that?
Please take a look, a look at how silly our enemy is.
edit: a bit like a (PG) submarine
I don't see how that relates to US accusations of Russian aggression and the quality of the Tu-144 that the BBC article is discussing. For example, you haven't refuted anything about what the article actually says regarding the plane's deficiencies.
If one were to follow your premise here to its logical conclusion, it would lead to this: you can never negatively critique anything created by the Soviet Union, or you're working for the US in a PR war against modern Russia.
https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html
I really don't understand why it's difficult to you. 55 flights aren't a success by chance. What you've said about staggering achievement fully applies to Tu-144. The creators were facing same challenges, and had to solve them in the same time - and got the plane flyable, if not efficient and safe enough, to be used by NASA in 2000-s.
We can say that Concorde had less technical flaws than Tu-144, clear in hindsight, but I don't see how that makes them incomparable.
But if you compare reliablility, security and practicability than the Concord is just hands down a much better airplane. Because a 4% chance to crash with the plane is just abysmal.
It was clear 40 years ago. those who understood the area knew it had 0 chance at being a competitor. was the tu-144 a success? by many metrics yes. was it at all comparable to the concorde? absolutely not.
> "if not efficient and safe enough, to be used by NASA in 2000-s."
Nasa has to re-fit the craft, including engines.
- http://www.migflug.com/en/jet-fighter-flights/flying-with-a-...
- http://www.spaceadventures.com/
https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html
As you know they never materialized due to lack of reasonable economic demand.
I think the sadder story are Soviet high-speed trains. There were one or two, they did some speed records, worked on some experimental routes and never got wide adoption.
Only in the last 15 years there's finally some viable high-speed options. Including one of Soviet designs incidentally.
Is this also related to the problematic and eventually scrapped Dutch high-speed Fyra trains?
SIG, then owned by Fiat Ferroviaria, built the electromagnetic actuators used by the Swiss ICN and the British Class 390 "Pendolino".
Concorde's largest downfall wasn't technical, it was social. The original expectation was that she would rapidly climb, go supersonic over land, and supercruise all the way to her destination. If this was possible it was reasonably economical.
Problem is that sonic-booms over populated areas are a big "no no." So Concorde was forced to wait until she got out over the atlantic to supercruise, which meant more time spent in her inefficient subsonic configuration and longer flight times.
In 1976 the US actually banned Concorde due to noise complaints. The ban was lifted in 1977 after changes mentioned above.
NASA is working on quieter supersonic flight, which reduces the sonic boom on the ground.
https://www.nasa.gov/press-release/nasa-begins-work-to-build...
Hopefully, we get commercial supersonic flight in some form in the 2020’s.
http://www.popularmechanics.com/flight/news/a28351/supersoni...
https://www.digitaltrends.com/cool-tech/boom-supersonic-jet/
Yes but as scrumper notes that made it inefficient.
The Concorde seated 100 people, in first class. If you can’t fly at supersonic speeds, you aren’t going to spend the extra money.
https://www.ainonline.com/aviation-news/business-aviation/20...
Eventually the bill passed, it has a provision that the FAA should "obtain the input of aerospace industry stakeholders regarding the appropriate regulatory framework and timeline", and report back next year.
https://www.congress.gov/bill/115th-congress/house-bill/2997...
All of the relevant destinations on both sides of the ocean (Shanghai, Beijing, Tokyo, Singapore, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle) are right by the sea, which of course isn't the case for Paris and London where the Concorde flew from.
That said, the furtherest north any of those charters landed in the far east was Hong Kong.
ANC is still a major refueling and sorting stop for air cargo -- most all air cargo between China and the mainland U.S. passes through Anchorage. The Anchorage FedEx hub is only passed by Hong Kong and Memphis in terms of volume, and the UPS hub is also one of the largest for that company.
That's counterintuitive when you look at a flat map, but not on a globe.
Here's a flat projection of some great circle routes:
http://www.gcmap.com/mapui?P=SFO-NRT-SIN,SFO-HKG-SIN
Note that the shortest path goes a lot closer to Alaska than it does Hawaii.
I've heard it's cheaper (whether this is in terms of risk or dollars I don't know) to send up a dedicated tanker to top of a bunch of large planes that took off with little fuel than it is to make a bunch of large planes take off fully loaded with cargo and fuel.
The problem is that's a whole additional, expensive skill your pilots need.
LA-Tokyo is ~4700nmi (~8200km), and polar route flights are generally used by planes with a range around or above 7000nmi (~13000km) like the Dreamliner or the A350 XWB
A modern Concorde would almost certainly have an ETOPS rating which would allow for trans-Pacific routes, which is where the true time and fuel efficiency is to be found in supersonic flight.
Sonic booms go parallel to your path, so a vertically moving rocket has a sonic boom that goes parallel to the ground and doesn't bother anyone.
However the big issue with rockets (other than technology which SpaceX thinks that it can handle) is that about 1/3 of people get sick in freefall. (Estimate that I read from the operators of the vomit comet.)
Do you think that that is unreasonable?
Sibling comment has a good point that hyperloop could make spaceports at safe distances more accessible.
So 15 miles is definitely out of the blast radius. What about the fireball?
Google told me the following. 15 miles is roughly 24 km. The mass of air is 1.2 kg per cubic meter. The volume of a sphere is 4/3 pi r^3. The energy of a kt is about 4.184e9 joules. It takes about 1 joule to increase the temperature of air by 1 C. When I put all of that together I calculate that a 15kt explosion has enough energy to raise the temperature of a 15 mile ball of air by about 0.9 C.
Please double check my figures and calculation, but I think that your average city can survive that. :-)
Edit: On my phone I'm getting ~5.8 joules per square meter. Google seems to be mangling the units, though, so I can't be sure it's not dropping or adding in a factor of 1,000, though.
Edit 2: assuming that figure is correct, unless it's released in <1/200 of a second, it's not competitive with the sun at the equator (>1,000 Watts/Joules per m^2 per second)
Here's the math, if you want to double check: (10 x 4.184 x (10^9 joules))/(4 x pi x (24000 meters)^2)
A supersonic jet makes a sonic boom on the ground over its whole trajectory. That's what makes it undesirable for overland travel.
I think it was in '03 and the price was just something like $12,000 for the two flights. It was high enough that I put it on a credit card. The prices had a lot of variation and I flew first class but they had a higher class that they called Concorde, as I recall.
I think there is an enormous market for something like Concorde now, much more than there was before. The amount of super rich has increased massively (and each of them have way more money). I think you'd even see executives using it over their own private jets for the speed increase - which means tickets could be crazy expensive, as operating a jet is very pricey.
I suppose it'd depend a bit on if you could get WiFi on it though. Wonder if that is possible at supersonic speeds?
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supersonic_business_jet
1: https://boomsupersonic.com/
Sorry, but Concord was a bad idea and it isn't coming back. Maybe some kind of private airplane for the Elon Musks of the world who can afford to pay their own plane. But a supersonic cruiser just isn't viable.
Your point about WiFi is the real killer. Why pay an order of magnitude more for faster travel, when what you really need is reliable WiFi so you can work from the plane. Then travel time is just a convenience, it doesn't stop work.
On the topic of WiFi, SpaceX is able to return video from the Falcon 9 on ascent and descent in many cases. So even though the very high Doppler and tracking problems involved in wireless communication to a rocket are not trivial, they're already doing it.
One of the challenges Virgin Galactic ran into in its sales efforts was the high co-incidence between (a) people who can pay for a super-expensive form of transport and (b) people whose Board, limited partnership or employment agreements prohibit them from doing super-risky stuff.
So let's imagine you live in New York and have a meeting in Paris- and let's say, for the purpose of argument, that it's actually a transporter, instantaneous travel from airport to airport. You leave your house at 6AM, get to the airport at 7AM. Its an international flight, so you need to get to the airport early, so your flight leaves at 8AM. You instantaneously arrive in Paris, but that's six hours time zone different: 2PM in Paris. Two hours to navigate through customs and the airport and it's 4PM, an hour to do ground transport to your meeting and it's already 5PM.
So even with exactly zero travel time between JFK->CDG your meeting can't be conducted at normal business times. So if your meeting still requires traveling out the day before and dealing with jet lag and all the rest, there just isn't that much benefit to justify the costs.
It might make sense for a business jet, so long as the costs are really not much more than a GV, or if it's primarily about prestige anyway.
There are two real reasons this no longer works; first the international travelling class has turned out to be far greedier and care less about their lives than anyone imagined, secondly Skype.
As far as travel versus communications goes, from what I can see improving communications technology places a higher premium on travel than before, not less. Easier for senior executives to stay in touch with HQ on the go, but that ability means that relationship building is now more important.
But traveling? In 1985, you could somewhat stay in touch by telephone (but generally not cell phone) though it was easier if you had a dedicated assistant and international long distance was rather variable. And sending documents probably involved faxes. While meetings/flights/time zones mean I may not always be reachable when traveling on business today, it's a lot easier than it was 30 years ago.
As for the wait time at the airport: if you're buying premium tickets the airline doesn't care how late you arrive as long as you don't delay the flight. IIRC, at least for domestic travel TSA requires that all checked luggage be presented at least 30 minutes prior to departure, so that's the only hard time limit. Maybe it's earlier for international travel, but for a single day itinerary you presumably wouldn't have any checked luggage.
It would be faster to get through the CDG customs lines if you had a Schengen citizenship, since they could get into the the Schengen lines, but that's not really particularly useful advice.
All the gear would have been put in a transit and driven up by one of the technicians
It was also noisy and cramped. Fantastic though, it was a once-in-a-lifetime experience and a wonderful thing to have done.
That's pretty much it... I enjoyed it but it wasn't life altering.
Was it worth it? Probably not for most. It was worth it just to have had the experience, in my case. I'd always wanted to go and they were shutting down. So, I went. At the time, I could have spent the money more wisely, but I don't regret it.
If you felt the window, it was warm to the touch vs. cold on a subsonic. Outside window was much smaller than subsonic.
The sound of the air passing by was closer to a sizzling sound in super cruise vs. what we hear on subsonic.
Take off had a noticeably faster groundspeed before rotation.
60-90 seconds (I forget, depends on airport) after departing the runway, throttles were reduced and you felt the plane slow quickly and the plane's angle of attack was reduced. This was for noise abatement and they explained this prior to takeoff so not as to alarm you. Leaving JFK on 31L included a sharp left bank as soon as wheels up to follow the shoreline and avoid populated areas. Example: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8j-3003jtuY
After leaving populated area, throttles were pushed to full and climb resumed. If all went according to flight plan, Concorde would be at .95 Mach shortly and get the OK to go supersonic.
Afterburners. You felt them getting turned on to go supersonic. They were turned on in pairs - one on each side. Felt like someone was gently pushing you from behind.
No turbulence - would fly above the weather.
Landing was like being in a recliner. High angle of attach on the approach. Once down on all wheels, NOISE as the reversers kicked in.
The delta wing didn't flex like subsonic wings do, so any bumps during climb or decent felt a bit more sharp (less bouncy/spongy? hard to find the words). Maybe it was just me.
Other than that, it's the same as a regular subsonic.
10/10 would do again. Need time travel.
Concorde's narrow fuselage made it remarkably cramped and uncomfortable. The galleys were also tiny, precluding the elaborate à la carte dining that is now standard in the front seats of widebody jets.
For the kind of customer that used Concorde, the idea of being pampered in Business or First was often much more attractive than saving a couple of hours.
Today, Concorde would struggle to compete on overall journey time with the A318s flying out of London City Airport. The speed advantage of Concorde would be badly eroded by the Kafkaesque nightmare of travelling via Heathrow.
People vastly underestimate the effect lay-flat travel had on demand for the Concorde.
Consider the time differences between London and New York. An overnight lay-flat loses a traveller little to no daytime. A Concorde, while faster, is less comfortable and leaves and/or arrives at an awkward time for a business traveller.
Yes, longer distance flights are, well, long but then you have a whole other set of engineering challenges to do those routes nonstop supersonic.
Lay flat preceded the Concorde. More than that, it was caused by it. "In 1977, El Al announced plans to reconfigure its aircraft with a small first class cabin and larger business class cabin on the assumption that most transatlantic first-class passengers would shift their business to the Concorde" [1].
EDIT: This is all wrong.
> Relatively few people are really in a situation where the few hours in a comfortable plane are worth $$$$
Business class is where airlines make the bulk of their profits.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Business_class#History
Business class mostly started up as an offering for, well, business travelers who could give the appearance of being frugal relative to first class while still traveling comfortably. What's happened over time is a lot of dedicated first class seating has gone away and business class has been incrementally upgraded to something that's mostly much better than old-fashioned first class ever was.
> Relatively few people are really in a situation where the few hours in a comfortable plane are worth $$$$
Business class is where airlines make the bulk of their profits.
I wasn't clear. Yes. Lots of people will pay extra for business. I was saying I'm not sure how many of those will then spend 2x or more for a bit more speed when they're already comfortable.
ADDED: This article suggests lay-flat came in during the 1990s which sounds about right to me: https://thepointsguy.com/2017/05/evolution-of-business-class... I definitely remember flying business class transatlantic in the early 90s and it wasn't lay-flat.
You're 100% correct--my bad.
(And as I recall it got him in at rush hour rather than just having a nice dinner on the plane.)
Since the Concorde was a luxury airliner, it couldn't fly as often as a regular airplane.
If you're in London and you find out you need to be in NY right now at all costs, it may be faster to hop on a business jet or even a commercial flight rather than wait for the next Concorde.
And as first class (and business jets) got comfortable, the need to get out of the air ASAP is much less than it used to be.
US banned concorde because Boeing ordered the government to ban it
> “There was the space race and the race to put a man on the Moon race happening at the same time.
> The Nasa flights spelled the end of the Tu-144’s flying career. Despite the refinements added by Nasan
> The Nasa programme bought the Tu-144 back from the dead
Anyway, specifically of interest here is Teknik Museum Sinsheim [1], which has both a Concorde and a Tu-144 on one of the hall roofs, next to each other. You get to climb up and walk through them, look up from under them, etc. but it's really cool to just look at all the little differences between them. Here's [2] a cool website I just found that shows a side by side comparison of the two jets.
The one that caught my eye immediately, which you can see on that page as well as this [3] wiki image, was that the air intake on the Tu-144 is far longer, necessitating the rear bogies to fold up into the air intake. I can't begin to imagine how they handled that without seriously messing with the air flow (and I can't find any diagrams of the airflow like with the Concorde). Wiki apparently says it was due to design misconceptions on the Soviet side and they were eventually shortened significantly. Also, the engines sit far more inboard on the Tu than the Concorde, presumably so they can get that additional length of intake up the fuselage/wing structure. Alternatively, it wouldn't surprise me if that's also part of its military heritage coming through.
The Tu-144 is a pretty fascinating aircraft, even beyond the story behind its development and competition with the Concorde. However, it's really cool to compare the pair and see the differences because it makes you wonder why they differ in those ways - whether it's a case of the Soviets thinking they should replace/modify the Western design with something better, or whether they took multiple concepts including the Western design and sort of mashed them together. It's truly a fascinating aircraft, despite its failures.
[1]: https://sinsheim.technik-museum.de/en/
[2]: http://www.hitechweb.genezis.eu/concorde_vs_tu-144.htm
[3]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tupolev_Tu-144#/media/File:Tup...
They started building it because of military paranoia. They did copy some of the design but it was to be able to accomplish the same type of mission. If I remember correctly, notably polar orbits. The west calls it a shuttle copy, I think it's probably more a design convergence.
Buran was able to fly by itself, it was boosted by modular liquid fuel rocket [2]. The book goes into details about the differences between the two and a bit of history pre-shuttle, programs like the spiral space planes. It's also humbling when you find out that people in the ~1900 thought about going to other planets [3].
[1]: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1712747.Energiya_Buran [2]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Energia [3]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_rockets#Early_20th-...
Long out of print but an excellent book
https://www.amazon.com/Soviet-SST-Techno-Politics-Howard-Moo...
In addition to those links, Air Vectors has a tremendous writeup on both the Concorde and Tu-144: http://airvectors.net/avsst.html
[1]: http://www.ep-fans.info/?id=1540,12,11
The standard reason given it failed was the plans were leaked on purpose to the Soviets that had flaws to try (successfully) to make it crash.
I'm happy it's an urban legend, but it was up there with the NN Tank story and the Gas Pipeline story (yet to be disappointed that this too is legend) as a common pre-WWW engineering story.
Why no mention? Even to nix the legend or for old times sake.
Why isn't it considered viable? The world is 2x richer than the last time the Concorde flew...
https://boomsupersonic.com/
The major pressure has been to make aviation cheaper, not faster.
One question is whether you can get noise to the level where you could go supersonic over land.
The bigger question is the economic one. Can you operate profitably at price levels that people would be willing to buy sufficient tickets. You're talking about a plane that is basically designed for only first class flyers to use because subsonic is always going to be cheaper. So how many people will fly at a probable premium over current lay-flat business/first for a faster ride in likely less comfortable seating?
So, a copy was rushed into testing before the original was ready. This could explain why there were flaws in the design...
This is the key to understand this plane. Soviet goverment considered bombers to be obsolete by rockets. Designers had to pull many tricks to keep supersonic bomber program running.
One way was to develop civil/cargo plane. Other was to call it 'rocket carrier' (long range missile launcher).
Development was expensive, and Boeing was relying on considerable contributions from the US government. The project was cancelled in 1971 amid cost and environmental concerns.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boeing_2707