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Listen to a RealAudio
feed of today's 4:00 welcoming ceremonies at the West Ramp.
"Delta wing with the long nose on the downwind, rock
your wings". Captain Max Robinson and his crew landed a British Airways supersonic
Concorde at AirVenture Oshkosh at 1224 Friday. They were about an hour later than their
scheduled arrival because of delays leaving JFK. EAA President Tom Poberezny, NASA
Administrator Dan Goldin and a huge AirVenture crowd welcomed the airplane to the West
Ramp. Captain John Cook piloted Concorde's first arrival in 1985. Since then the sleek
supersonic jetliner has been part of the 1988, 1990 and 1994 shows.
As in past years, several planeloads of folks were willing to part with a furkin of shillings (actually $715 USD) for a "local" ride on the ship. Four non-supersonic flights - two each on Saturday, August 1 and Sunday, August 2 - will depart Oshkosh and head up over Canada before returning to Oshkosh. The airplane leaves Monday morning. When it's not flying it's on display at the West Ramp showcase area.
In the 1960's and early 1970's, during the
coldest of the cold war, American, Soviet and European designers each worked to claim
bragging rights on the world's first supersonic design. Boeing and Lockheed started by
looking at the technology of the XB-70 "Valkyrie" bomber. From that, Lockheed
developed the delta-wing L-2000, a similar design to Concorde. Boeing created a design
that was 50% bigger but could carry three times as many passengers as the others. The
USSR's Tupolev Tu-144 was the first to fly in December 1968, but couldn't recover its
reputation after crashing at the Paris airshow in 1973. It stopped flying in 1977. Once
the race to fly had been won, Lockheed concentrated on fighters and Boeing folded its
design work into what would become the 747.
Meanwhile, the British-French consortium's Concorde design started flying in March 1969. It began commercial service in 1976 and is the only supersonic design still flying. Concorde cruises at Mach 2 - now that's a closure rate!! - which puts and end to the "who's got the fastest airplane on the field?" discussion...at least this year. There's no SR-71 here this year.
There is no coach. Each of the seats aboard Concorde is
a first class seat. The ship is powered by four Rolls Royce/SNECMA Olympus 593 engines,
lifts its 400,000 pounds of gross takeoff weight off the ground at 135 knots and cruises
its 3,545 nautical mile range between FL550 and FL600. Concorde is 204 feet long with a
wingspan of 84 feet.
The grounds of AirVenture Oshkosh 98 are filled with airplanes. Over 12,000 at last count. Singles, twins, rotors, seaplanes, experimentals of all kinds. Different strokes for different folks. But I'm guessing there's one airplane on the field we'd all like to log some time in. Concorde.