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Great Concorde Tribute

PostPosted: Mon Dec 13, 2004 7:52 pm
by SideWinder9
I just read this...
I think it is very good. Bye supersonic friend... :-[




I hope it works. I tried it and the reveiw itself did not come up. If, so try to refresh it.

Re: Great Concorde Tribute

PostPosted: Mon Dec 13, 2004 7:58 pm
by Craig.
very nice.:) i always take great pride in being able to say my grandfather helped design various parts of concorde

Re: Great Concorde Tribute

PostPosted: Mon Dec 13, 2004 8:17 pm
by SideWinder9
That would be cool. So it worked Ok?

Re: Great Concorde Tribute

PostPosted: Tue Dec 14, 2004 12:57 am
by forfun
yea it works fine.

im just sad i never got to see the plane flying  :'( lol

Re: Great Concorde Tribute

PostPosted: Tue Dec 14, 2004 4:42 am
by zcottovision
As part of Concorde's farewall UK tour, she came to Belfast International Airport. I took a day off University to go up and see this beautiful aircraft. It's amazing to see.....absolutely tiny! But so elegant! And the noise is incredible. Your grandfather did a pretty good job, Craig!

Re: Great Concorde Tribute

PostPosted: Thu Dec 16, 2004 1:27 am
by gn85
That was a fantastic read.  I am frequently in the Washington DC area, but avoid Dulles at all cost (the traffic is terrible).  But I may make a trip out there just to see her one more time.

Re: Great Concorde Tribute

PostPosted: Sat Dec 18, 2004 1:46 pm
by Gary R.
You guys may not have to lament Concorde too long.  In the most recent issue of "Flying" is a small article about two proposed ssbj's .  One will use silencing airframe design to create only 1% of Concorde's boom and the other will be a conventional design with a wing much like an F-104 and limit speed to .98-1.1 over land because they mathematical determined that the dbm's will still be with-in law at that speed.  Also, I may mention other ideas which I read about in Popular Mechanics about ssbj's utilizing other technologies derived from the tests conducted earlier this year with that nose modified( oh heck, I can't remember the fighter model that they pellicane nosed for that).  I'll probably remember it after I'm done with this post.  Anyway, the designs I saw illustrated in PM are all needle nosed with no forward visual means.  It is intended that the pilots will visually navigate using camera and LCD views in the cockpits of these ssbj's which isn't actually that great a problem considering that 100% of the flying in such a plane would be ifr anyway.