Today in History: January 21st
CONCORDE TAKES OFF:
January 21, 1976
From London's Heathrow Airport and Orly Airport outside Paris, the first
Concordes with commercial passengers simultaneously take flight on January 21,
1976. The London flight was headed to Bahrain in the Persian Gulf, and the Paris
to Rio de Janeiro via Senegal in West Africa. At their cruising speeds, the
innovative Concordes flew well over the sound barrier at 1,350 miles an hour,
cutting air travel time by more than half.The flights were the culmination of a
12-year effort that pitted English and French engineers against their
counterparts in the USSR. In 1962, 15 years after U.S. pilot Chuck Yeager first
broke the sound barrier, Britain and France signed a treaty to develop the
world's first supersonic passenger airline. The next year, President John F.
Kennedy proposed a similar U.S. project. Meanwhile, in the USSR, Soviet leader
Nikita Khrushchev ordered his top aviation engineers to beat the West to the
achievement.There were immense technical challenges in building a supersonic
airliner. Engines would need to be twice as powerful as those built for normal
jets, and the aircraft's frame would have to withstand immense pressure from
shock waves and endure high temperatures caused by air friction. In the United
States, Boeing tackled the supersonic project but soon ran into trouble with its
swing-wing design. In England and France, however, early results were much more
promising, and Khrushchev ordered Soviet intelligence to find out as much as
possible about the Anglo-French prototypes.In 1965, the French arrested Sergei
Pavlov, head of the Paris office of the Soviet airliner Aeroflot, for illegally
obtaining classified information about France's supersonic project. Another
high-level Soviet spy remained unknown, however, and continued to feed the
Soviets information about the Concorde until his arrest in 1977.On December 31,
1968, just three months before the first scheduled flight of the Concorde
prototype, the fruits of Soviet industrial espionage were revealed when the
Soviet's TU-144 became the world's first supersonic airliner to fly. The
aircraft looked so much like the Concorde that the Western press dubbed it
"Konkordski."In 1969, the Concorde began its test flights. Two years later, the
United States abandoned its supersonic program, citing budget and environmental
concerns. It was now up to Western Europe to make supersonic airline service
viable before the Soviets. Tests continued, and in 1973 the TU-144 came to the
West to appear alongside the Concorde at the Paris Air Show at Le Bourget
airport. On June 3, in front of 200,000 spectators, the Concorde flew a flawless
demonstration. Then it was the TU-144's turn. The aircraft made a successful
360-degree turn and then began a steep ascent. Abruptly, it leveled off and
began a sharp descent. Some 1,500 feet above the ground, it broke up from
overstress and came crashing into the ground, killing all six Soviet crew
members and eight French civilians.Soviet and French investigators ruled that
pilot error was the cause of the accident. However, in recent years, several of
the Russian investigators have disclosed that a French Mirage intelligence
aircraft was photographing the TU-144 from above during the flight. A French
investigator confirmed that the Soviet pilot was not told that the Mirage was
there, a breach of air regulations. After beginning his ascent, the pilot may
have abruptly leveled off the TU-144 for fear of crashing into this aircraft. In
the sudden evasive maneuver, the thrust probably failed, and the pilot then
tried to restart the engines by entering a dive. He was too close to the ground,
however, and tried to pull up too soon, thus overstressing the aircraft.In
exchange for Soviet cooperation in the cover-up, the French investigators agreed
not to criticize the TU-144's design or engineering. Nevertheless, further
problems with the TU-144, which was designed hastily in its bid to beat the
Concorde into the air, delayed the beginning of Soviet commercial service.
Concorde passenger service began with much fanfare in January 1976. Western
Europe had won its supersonic race with the Soviets, who eventually allowed just
100 domestic flights with the TU-144 before discontinuing the airliner.The
Concorde was not a great commercial success, however, and people complained
bitterly about the noise pollution caused by its sonic booms and loud engines.
Most airlines declined to purchase the aircraft, and just 16 Concordes were
built for British Airways and Air France. Service was eventually limited between
London and New York and Paris and New York, and luxury travelers appreciated the
less than four-hour journey across the Atlantic.On July 25, 2000, an Air France
Concorde crashed 60 seconds after taking off from Paris en route to New York.
All 109 people aboard and four on the ground were killed. The accident was
caused by a burst tire that ruptured a fuel tank, creating a fire that led to
engine failure. The fatal accident--the first in Concorde's history--signaled
the decline of the aircraft. On October 24, 2003, the Concorde took its last
regular commercial flight.
------------------------------------------------------------------
MORE GENERAL INTEREST
1793 King Louis XVI executed
1924 Vladimir Lenin dies
historychannel.com/tdih/tdih.jsp?category=general&month=10272953&day=10272986
AMER. REVOLUTION
1738 Ethan Allen is born
historychannel.com/tdih/tdih.jsp?category=americanrevolution&month=10272953&day=10272986
AUTOMOTIVE
1899 Opel Opens For Business
historychannel.com/tdih/tdih.jsp?category=automotive&month=10272953&day=10272986
CIVIL WAR
1863 First Battle of Sabine Pass
historychannel.com/tdih/tdih.jsp?category=civil&month=10272953&day=10272986
COLD WAR
1950 Alger Hiss convicted of perjury
historychannel.com/tdih/tdih.jsp?category=coldwar&month=10272953&day=10272986
CRIME
1993 Exorcism in the Australian Outback
historychannel.com/tdih/tdih.jsp?category=crime&month=10272953&day=10272986
ENTERTAINMENT
1959 Cecil B. De Mille dies
historychannel.com/tdih/tdih.jsp?category=entertainment&month=10272953&day=10272986
LITERARY
1985 Don DeLillo's White Noise wins the American Book Award
historychannel.com/tdih/tdih.jsp?category=literary&month=10272953&day=10272986
OLD WEST
1855 Gun designer John Browning is born
historychannel.com/tdih/tdih.jsp?category=oldwest&month=10272953&day=10272986
PRESIDENTIAL
1977 Carter pardons draft dodgers
historychannel.com/tdih/tdih.jsp?category=presidential&month=10272953&day=10272986
VIETNAM WAR
1968 Battle for Khe Sanh begins
historychannel.com/tdih/tdih.jsp?category=vietnamwar&month=10272953&day=10272986
WALL STREET
1895 Sherman Anti-Trust Act Derailed
historychannel.com/tdih/tdih.jsp?category=wallstreet&month=10272953&day=10272986
WORLD WAR I
1924 Vladimir Ilyich Lenin dies
historychannel.com/tdih/tdih.jsp?category=worldwari&month=10272953&day=10272986
WORLD WAR II
1867 General Weygand is born
historychannel.com/tdih/tdih.jsp?category=worldwarii&month=10272953&day=10272986
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Create a profile for your subscriptions:
emailmgr.aetv.com/newprofile.jsp?brand=thc
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home