Just over 20 years ago, Concorde completed its final flight. To celebrate, we're looking back to our 2003 Christmas road test.
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When it comes to driving in a straight line, few men have had so many short-lived, high-acceleration journeys, all planned to end abruptly at 240mph without sustaining injury.
Such has been the preserve of that small band of chaps (and one chap-ess) whose privilege it was to drive a 185-tonne, 10-wheeled, three-legged skateboard down the tarmac's centre-line.
The journey doesn't stop at 240mph, of course, even when the tarmac runs out because on reaching sufficient speeds they become airborne.
That 30-second tarmac sprint requires full power from the four Rolls-Royce Olympus 593 engines, boosted by additional re-heat. In a car, acceleration can be quick, punchy and exciting.
This is all that and more. Not just because the speed continues to increase, but the acceleration rate too. As the forward speed builds up, the engines become turbocharged, the thrust squeezing the pilot's dense seat-back padding down to a mere wafer.
Design and engineering
The wonder of Concorde is that no one on board notices when - without a murmur or ripple - it accelerates through the sound barrier, past the 1000mph mark, to its supersonic cruise speed of 1350mph. Only the display panel tells the paying public what's happening In addition to the mph and Mach number.
Passengers are told the altitude (up To 60,000ft), outside air temperature (generally around minus 60 degrees celsius) and distance remaining to their destination.
On the flight deck, the crew has all the usual aircraft instruments, plus a few more one would only expect to find in a military fighter. (Incidentally, just like the original Mini, there's a simple button for the starter.)
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Nope instead we as a race have started to regress not just on hiw we get around the world and the speed but in the way humans treat other humans too which is horrible to see and so sad. Yes there has been some positives like the advancement of electric cars and the affordability of them has come down too so now ordinary people can afford them too but even in our towns and cities now speed limits are being reduced from 50kph to 30kph etc. We are going slower every where.
There really should have been a succeser to the Concorde by now. And it should be affordable to the masses to. A pity it does not look like happening anytime soon.
You seem to have a lot of ifs, now, can you supply the billions it would take to achieve them?, as for EV transport for the ordinary people, now affordable for everyone?, really?, Concorde successor? , not needed now, there are planes that carry two hundred plus at five six hundred miles per hour, they don't need to get to New York in two hours,and even if there were, there aren't enough who'd use it.
I can remember being taken to Turnhouse Airport near Edinburgh to see the prototype doing a flyover, it was very loud!, there is one Concorde at EastFortune Air Museum,maybe one day I'll visit and see it in the metal up close.