Difference between revisions of "Concorde"

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[[Image:Concorde1.jpg|thumb|200px|The Concorde in flight]]
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{{Infobox aircraft
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| image      = Concorde1.jpg
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| type      = Supersonic airliner
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| national origin = [[France]] and the [[United Kingdom]]
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| unitcost  = £23 million
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| variants  = none
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| manufacturer = BAC and Sud Aviation
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| first flight =  2 March 1969
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| introduced = 21 January 1976
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| status    = retired
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| launch customer = British Airways and Air France
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| primary user = British Airways and Air France
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| produced  = 1965–1979
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| number built = 20
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}}
  
 
The '''Concorde''' was a [[supersonic]] commercial airline [[jet]]. It flew at top speeds of 1330 mph, or 1 mile every 3 seconds, or Mach 2 - twice the speed of sound. The last Concorde flight was made on November 26, 2003 from [[London]] to [[Bristol]], [[UK]] where that particular aircraft was built. It finished commercial operations a month earlier with a final flight from [[New York]] to [[London]] on 24 October 2003.
 
The '''Concorde''' was a [[supersonic]] commercial airline [[jet]]. It flew at top speeds of 1330 mph, or 1 mile every 3 seconds, or Mach 2 - twice the speed of sound. The last Concorde flight was made on November 26, 2003 from [[London]] to [[Bristol]], [[UK]] where that particular aircraft was built. It finished commercial operations a month earlier with a final flight from [[New York]] to [[London]] on 24 October 2003.

Revision as of 20:16, May 7, 2017

Concorde
Concorde1.jpg
Type Supersonic airliner
National Origin France and the United Kingdom
Unit cost £23 million
Variants none
Manufacturer BAC and Sud Aviation
First flight 2 March 1969
Introduced 21 January 1976
Status retired
Launch customer British Airways and Air France
Primary users N/A
Produced 1965–1979
Number built 20

The Concorde was a supersonic commercial airline jet. It flew at top speeds of 1330 mph, or 1 mile every 3 seconds, or Mach 2 - twice the speed of sound. The last Concorde flight was made on November 26, 2003 from London to Bristol, UK where that particular aircraft was built. It finished commercial operations a month earlier with a final flight from New York to London on 24 October 2003.

The plane was named Concorde (French for "concord," which means agreement or harmony) because it was developed as a cooperative project between the United Kingdom and France, specifically between the British Aircraft Corporation (now BAE) and Aerospatiale (now EADS).