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RJMAZ wrote:The Concorde carried 95T of fuel and only around 100 seats that are premium economy by todays standards. With a range of 3900nm most of this fuel was consumed flying transatlantic.
Cabin area would be similar to an A320 and looking at the payload range chart the A320 would burn slightly over 20T of fuel on a similar trip.
So the concorde burns 4 times the fuel of the A320 over the trip to carry the same payload. I would assume maintenance of a new build concorde would also be more over 4 times the cost of an A320. Staffing costs costs would be similar, airport fees based on weight would be roughly double for the supersonic aircraft.
Seat prices for a supersonic aircraft would easily be $2000+ for London to New York.
DocLightning wrote:RJMAZ wrote:Seat prices for a supersonic aircraft would easily be $2000+ for London to New York.
Excellent analysis until the last sentence.
LAX772LR wrote:DocLightning wrote:RJMAZ wrote:Seat prices for a supersonic aircraft would easily be $2000+ for London to New York.
Excellent analysis until the last sentence.
Fairly certain that he mistakenly left a 0 off of that...
sonicruiser wrote:Concorde had nothing to do with economics. It was unparalleled in the fact that efficiency was completely irrelevant, it was deafeningly loud, sleek with an air of sophistication, and totally impractical, but that's what made it so awesome. It was a massive middle finger to NIMBY's and environmental stooges in Greenpeace everywhere waking up entire neighborhoods with 150K pounds of thrust and producing air shattering sonic booms in its wake while passengers sipped champagne as they glanced out over the curvature of the earth, to the rising sun, the stars, the horizon of space, and further to the heavens. Nothing mattered except supercruising through the sound barrier at 60K feet in impeccable elegance courtesy of four gas guzzling afterburners and arriving in style before you departed. It was a legend of the 70's that gave us a glimpse into the future and was far ahead of its time. Subsonic travel was for plebeians, supersonic travel was for the jetsetters of tomorrow. It defied logic and will forever remain a powerful symbol of what humanity can achieve in the face of adversity and those who say you can't. She is truly a pinnacle of engineering and an enduring triumph to the spirit of resilience.
Arion640 wrote:LAX772LR wrote:DocLightning wrote:Excellent analysis until the last sentence.
Fairly certain that he mistakenly left a 0 off of that...
I don’t think they were ever that expensive. £6000 one way i seem to recall?
sonicruiser wrote:Concorde had nothing to do with economics. It was unparalleled in the fact that efficiency was completely irrelevant, it was deafeningly loud, sleek with an air of sophistication, and totally impractical, but that's what made it so awesome. It was a massive middle finger to NIMBY's and environmental stooges in Greenpeace everywhere waking up entire neighborhoods with 150K pounds of thrust and producing air shattering sonic booms in its wake while passengers sipped champagne as they glanced out over the curvature of the earth, to the rising sun, the stars, the horizon of space, and further to the heavens. Nothing mattered except supercruising through the sound barrier at 60K feet in impeccable elegance courtesy of four gas guzzling afterburners and arriving in style before you departed. It was a legend of the 70's that gave us a glimpse into the future and was far ahead of its time. Subsonic travel was for plebeians, supersonic travel was for the jetsetters of tomorrow. It defied logic and will forever remain a powerful symbol of what humanity can achieve in the face of adversity and those who say you can't. She is truly a pinnacle of engineering and an enduring triumph to the spirit of resilience.
Arion640 wrote:LAX772LR wrote:Fairly certain that he mistakenly left a 0 off of that...
I don’t think they were ever that expensive. £6000 one way i seem to recall?
Plenty of high up Business executives who’s time really was money used it as a commuting tool. Plus various celebrities who just used it because they could.
Flighty wrote:sonicruiser wrote:Concorde had nothing to do with economics. It was unparalleled in the fact that efficiency was completely irrelevant, it was deafeningly loud, sleek with an air of sophistication, and totally impractical, but that's what made it so awesome. It was a massive middle finger to NIMBY's and environmental stooges in Greenpeace everywhere waking up entire neighborhoods with 150K pounds of thrust and producing air shattering sonic booms in its wake while passengers sipped champagne as they glanced out over the curvature of the earth, to the rising sun, the stars, the horizon of space, and further to the heavens. Nothing mattered except supercruising through the sound barrier at 60K feet in impeccable elegance courtesy of four gas guzzling afterburners and arriving in style before you departed. It was a legend of the 70's that gave us a glimpse into the future and was far ahead of its time. Subsonic travel was for plebeians, supersonic travel was for the jetsetters of tomorrow. It defied logic and will forever remain a powerful symbol of what humanity can achieve in the face of adversity and those who say you can't. She is truly a pinnacle of engineering and an enduring triumph to the spirit of resilience.
Enjoyable bit of bombast there - convincing! You're right, Concorde never made any sense except as an incredibly -- astoundingly -- impractical show-project. Which is exactly what the Apollo program was, too. And both programs were very valuable culturally and industrially. They were about an almost vulgar show of power. But, that is what St Peter's Basilica was probably about too. Projects like that are cool.
RJMAZ wrote:With a carbon fuselage it would be quicker to assemble.
LAX772LR wrote:RJMAZ wrote:With a carbon fuselage it would be quicker to assemble.
It'd also likely 1) melt and 2) disintegrate in midair due to the 10inch stretch generally incurred in 3hr+ supercruise... in both cases killing all pax aboard.
So yeahhhh, probably a better idea to stick with titanium+aluminum with limits on the composites.
RJMAZ wrote:The Concorde carried 95T of fuel and only around 100 seats that are premium economy by todays standards. With a range of 3900nm most of this fuel was consumed flying transatlantic.
Cabin area would be similar to an A320 and looking at the payload range chart the A320 would burn slightly over 20T of fuel on a similar trip.
So the concorde burns 4 times the fuel of the A320 over the trip to carry the same payload. I would assume maintenance of a new build concorde would also be more over 4 times the cost of an A320. Staffing costs costs would be similar, airport fees based on weight would be roughly double for the supersonic aircraft.
Seat prices for a supersonic aircraft would easily be $2000+ for London to New York.
RJMAZ wrote:Quite the opposite. Carbon fibre has a higher heat tolerance than aluminium and has one of the lowest heat expansion rates.
RJMAZ wrote:You wouldn't even need titanium on the leading edges until you got to mach 2.
rivetremover wrote:This is off topic but roughly how long did it take for it to reach Mach 1, cruise speed
rivetremover wrote:and its initial cruise altitude?
DocLightning wrote:RJMAZ wrote:The Concorde carried 95T of fuel and only around 100 seats that are premium economy by todays standards. With a range of 3900nm most of this fuel was consumed flying transatlantic.
Cabin area would be similar to an A320 and looking at the payload range chart the A320 would burn slightly over 20T of fuel on a similar trip.
So the concorde burns 4 times the fuel of the A320 over the trip to carry the same payload. I would assume maintenance of a new build concorde would also be more over 4 times the cost of an A320. Staffing costs costs would be similar, airport fees based on weight would be roughly double for the supersonic aircraft.
Seat prices for a supersonic aircraft would easily be $2000+ for London to New York.
Excellent analysis until the last sentence. Fuel only accounts for ~1/4 of the total cost of running an airline (and presumably a similar proportion of average airfare across an airline's system). However, the tickets for Concorde were not just expensive because of fuel. Most of what passengers were paying for was the experience. Concorde only had one competitor...and that was Concorde, AF vs BA.
The issue with flying at M=2.0 is that whether your engines burn coal, kerosine, or compressed natural angel farts, you need to burn 4-5 times as much of it to carry a given payload over a given distance at that speed. And whether your aircraft is made of titanium, CFRP, or nanotube-reinforced unobtanium, you need 2-4x as much of it to handle the stresses of flying at those speeds.
Until we have something like a fusion-powered aircraft, practical SSTs for mass transport just won't be a thing.
LAX772LR wrote:rivetremover wrote:and its initial cruise altitude?
Didn't really have one. Initial ATC restrictions aside, Concorde climbed continually as it supercruised, until it was ready to begin its descent/approach.
Starlionblue wrote:LAX772LR wrote:rivetremover wrote:and its initial cruise altitude?
Didn't really have one. Initial ATC restrictions aside, Concorde climbed continually as it supercruised, until it was ready to begin its descent/approach.
Wouldn't initial cruise altitude just depend on temperature and weight?
Starlionblue wrote:Side note. In an ideal world, all airliners would climb continually. As you burn off fuel your optimal altitude does continually increase.
LAX772LR wrote:RJMAZ wrote:Quite the opposite. Carbon fibre has a higher heat tolerance than aluminium and has one of the lowest heat expansion rates.
The aluminum isn't the part of concern...............
LAX772LR wrote:It'd also likely 1) melt and 2) disintegrate in midair due to the 10inch stretch generally incurred in 3hr+ supercruise... in both cases killing all pax aboard.
RJMAZ wrote:LAX772LR wrote:RJMAZ wrote:Quite the opposite. Carbon fibre has a higher heat tolerance than aluminium and has one of the lowest heat expansion rates.
The aluminum isn't the part of concern...............
You clearly dont know much about aircraft materials.
A modern day concorde could easily and would most likely have 99% of the exterior surfaces made out of carbon fibre. It could be built in large sections/barrels just like the 787. It will not melt or disintegrate in midair due to the 3 hour supercruise.
ren0312 wrote:If you can get the Concorde to fly again, how much would you have to charge to break even if you were BA or AF? What are its economics vs. modern transatlantic jetliners? As for the interior, since you are only talking about a 3 hour hop, you could still keep the same seats, except for the addition of inflight VOD and wifi.
snasteve wrote:ren0312 wrote:If you can get the Concorde to fly again, how much would you have to charge to break even if you were BA or AF? What are its economics vs. modern transatlantic jetliners? As for the interior, since you are only talking about a 3 hour hop, you could still keep the same seats, except for the addition of inflight VOD and wifi.
Not an answer to your question but wasn’t the Concorde sold to BA for one pound sterling per plane by the UK Govt? if I remember correctly? That should make it competitive with everything.
GDB wrote:snasteve wrote:ren0312 wrote:If you can get the Concorde to fly again, how much would you have to charge to break even if you were BA or AF? What are its economics vs. modern transatlantic jetliners? As for the interior, since you are only talking about a 3 hour hop, you could still keep the same seats, except for the addition of inflight VOD and wifi.
Not an answer to your question but wasn’t the Concorde sold to BA for one pound sterling per plane by the UK Govt? if I remember correctly? That should make it competitive with everything.
Myth generated by Branson, BOAC, BA's predecessor company, did buy 5 aircraft which when ordered in 1972 prices, were about 20% more expensive than a 747 at the time. This does not count development costs though not the first pioneering airliner to have done that.
In 1979/80, BA took on airframes 214 and 216, (later registered G-BOAG and G-BOAF), these were given for a nominal sum but this does not count BA's own money spent in getting these white tails to BA standard.
In 1984, BA and the UK government, ended an agreement that BA had when taking the aircraft in 1975/6, BA by then had merged and quite a few of a the board, some but not all from the short haul BEA predecessor, were reluctant to take on Concorde, government also wanted at least a bit of that development money back, if possible.
So 80% of what BA earned off Concorde went back to the government.
By 1984, with BA going private approaching, with new management, John King and Colin Marshall, not from inside BA (or airlines in general), with a mission to slash costs, (20,000 staff went in the early 80's), the writing was on the wall for Concorde, surely?
King looked at the aircraft in 1982, saw it was almost unique and gave a newly formed Concorde Division two years to make it a profit centre. Many will know the stories, how fares were adjusted upwards when customers, largely on corporate accounts were asked what they thought they were paying! Marketing was changed etc.
At the core of this was ending that crippling agreement with the UK government, BA payed a lump sum of some 10's of millions in exchange for than keeping what they earned off the aircraft.
This also affected support from industry too.
Now with an incentive to make the aircraft pay, BA certainly did just that. It became the flagship, in a way it was not before, including going private in 1987. More routes, more charters, new interiors, everything refreshed.
(G-BOAG had been grounded and used for spares in 1982, it was brought back into service, first with a major overhaul of the interior and the Landor livery).
I also heard comparisons with the Apollo Programme, from NASA when they visited BA Concorde Engineering in December 1998, the purpose was to compare notes on maintaining a very small fleet of unique air vehicles, long out of production, (such as the Space Shuttle), maintaining links with vendors when you only have small orders, often years apart.
As far as they were concerned, even at that point, Concorde for them was still 'the most advanced airliner in the world', their exact words!
A note on something above, you would not feel the reheat at Mach 2, just on take off, then two slight bumps, maybe, if down the back really, at transonic going to supersonic, until Mach 1.7 when they were switched off.
Worth remembering that Mach 2/50,000+ feet, the aircraft was very efficient, just not at lower speeds, lower altitudes, all airliners are like that, Concorde just took it way further, all part of having that much greater flight envelope, which is why comparing to subsonic airliners is a bit pointless.
I recall our Olympus 593 rep from RR saying that issue, for any new SST, would not be beating Concorde on efficiency at Mach 2/50,000+ feet, where it would be unlikely to better Concorde, it's the rest of the flight envelope, the emissions, noise, fuel useage, for that you need a high bypass turbofan, incompatible with the demands of a SST.
Which is why even initially promising concepts like Aerion have stalled.
Boeing could not even sell airlines on a bit more speed for a bit for fuel use with the Sonic Cruiser.
Gordon Roxburugh's superb site has all you need to know and probably more, here the efficiency of the aircraft in supercruise is well explained and illustrated;
http://www.concordesst.com/powerplant.html
LAX772LR wrote:RJMAZ wrote:With a carbon fuselage it would be quicker to assemble.
It'd also likely 1) melt and 2) disintegrate in midair due to the 10inch stretch generally incurred in 3hr+ supercruise... in both cases killing all pax aboard.
So yeahhhh, probably a better idea to stick with titanium+aluminum with limits on the composites.
cpd wrote:Lockheed themselves did so for another fast aircraft in very hot parts of that plane.
LAX772LR wrote:I'm far more inclined to take the word of those with actual expertise/accreditation --this excludes you-- on the matter: specifically, Lockheed's Don Kinard, in his explanation of why heavier metals are still used in the proportions that they are for supersonic designs, as opposed to going all composite at this point in time.
LAX772LR wrote:cpd wrote:Lockheed themselves did so for another fast aircraft in very hot parts of that plane.
...um, might wanna scroll up to Reply#24.
That's straight from Lockheed.
RJMAZ wrote:You can't be serious? So you are basing your argument on the fact the F-22 doesn't use a carbon fibre "sub structure"?
RJMAZ wrote:Also neither the F-35 or F-22 have a long tubular pressurised passenger section like the concorde which is where composites work best.
RJMAZ wrote:Despite this the F-35 still has 35% of its aircraft weight made out of composites. The 787 is 50% composite by weight. Even the 787 has 50% of its weight made out of metal yet we still call it a composite design.
RJMAZ wrote:Nearly the entire skin of the supercruising F-22 is composite.
cpd wrote:Good grief- some of the hottest parts on the exterior of the most famous Lockheed plane of them all were composite materials. They stood up to the demands of M3.0+ flight, sometimes even faster for some incredibly long missions.
Missions that were far longer than any Concorde flight and had more heating/cooling cycles as well.
LAX772LR wrote:No, I'm saying you likely wouldn't be able to get something all-composite that'd be built with enough structure to maintain integrity in that kind of service profile, and yet not be so overbuilt (or require increasingly exotic materials as listed above) such as to be completely beyond both weight/cost effectiveness.
ren0312 wrote:Concorde Economics
acjbbj wrote:ren0312 wrote:Concorde Economics
What an oxymoron.
acjbbj wrote:ren0312 wrote:Concorde Economics
What an oxymoron.
LAX772LR wrote:rivetremover wrote:and its initial cruise altitude?
Didn't really have one. Initial ATC restrictions aside, Concorde climbed continually as it supercruised, until it was ready to begin its descent/approach.
RJMAZ wrote:LAX772LR wrote:RJMAZ wrote:With a carbon fuselage it would be quicker to assemble.
It'd also likely 1) melt and 2) disintegrate in midair due to the 10inch stretch generally incurred in 3hr+ supercruise... in both cases killing all pax aboard.
So yeahhhh, probably a better idea to stick with titanium+aluminum with limits on the composites.
Quite the opposite. Carbon fibre has a higher heat tolerance than aluminium and has one of the lowest heat expansion rates.
You wouldn't even need titanium on the leading edges until you got to mach 2.
planecane wrote:I know it is delicate (see Columbia accident) but is the reinforced carbon carbon that was used on the space shuttle considered carbon fiber? How does it compare to titanium in weight and cost?
LAX772LR wrote:
cpd wrote:LAX772LR wrote:
You can head shake all you want, but it is the truth. If weather conditions intervened, it would and could drift back down to a lower altitude. That is the way it worked.
And a kudo to the post directly above - interesting.
B2707SST wrote:cpd wrote:LAX772LR wrote:
You can head shake all you want, but it is the truth. If weather conditions intervened, it would and could drift back down to a lower altitude. That is the way it worked.
And a kudo to the post directly above - interesting.
Glad you found it interesting! You're right regarding cruise-climb - it would be more accurate to say the aircraft climbed relative to a standard density altitude as it burned off fuel. Deviations in temperature from standard atmosphere could and did cause changes in absolute altitude, including descents if temperatures rose.
In fact, test pilot Brian Trubshaw recounts in his book that during a demonstration flight for the Shah, Concorde was cruising at Mach 2 when it suddenly encountered an unusually cold air pocket. "The autopilot could not compete with the change and commenced a rapid climb, followed by an even more rapid descent during which [indicated] air speed rose to 550 kt, 20 kt above the normal limit." This prompted a change in autopilot logic that increased the use of autothrottle and decreased the use of pitch to maintain Mach number following sudden changes in air temperature.