Wasnt the midair breakup from the TU-144 deu to a france mirage that was tailing it in the clouds and banged straight into it?
Dont know for sure, but that is what i remember seeing in a documentary about the plane.
Why in the heck is Starship on that list? Of course I had nothing to do with the aircraft, but I'm almost offended. The site say's it was slow, which I have only heard the exact opposite*, it say's that it was difficult to fly, also the exact opposite, and it say's that it was "a bear" to maintain. It was EXPENSIVE to maintain, but no more difficult than any other composite airplane. Composites have come a long way since 1989, and if that airplane rolled out today it would be just as succesful as any other twin turbo.
*Just looked it up, top speed was 335 knots (385 Mph).
I think the Starship was summed up by Raytheon's wish to have none be preserved in museums, and havong all airframes returned to them for disposal.
I also can't verify the Mach 2 stuff yet....but it seems likely in my opinion.
Oh geez, lets not forget the A380, because few jetways can support it, and not every tarmac surface in the world is prepared to hold a plane that heavy.
Once the fuel source has fizzled, we may be back to the propeller-driven planes, howbeit, not with combustion engines.I bet most airports needed modification for the 747 around 1970 too. It's called progress. If it wasn't we'd still be limited to flying piston engined biplanes of grass runways.
I think the Starship was summed up by Raytheon's wish to have none be preserved in museums, and havong all airframes returned to them for disposal.
Raytheon simpley didn't want to support it because of the cost. Also not all of them were disposed of- at least one is still flying, in fact I have touched it 8-).
...lol, not that that makes me cool or anything.![]()
The guy that owns it just didn't want to give it back to them, so he bought it outright. He also bought another one while they were still available to use as spare parts.
It's called progress.If it wasn't we'd still be limited to flying piston engined biplanes of grass runways.
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