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Revision as of 03:12, 5 August 2006 editKe4roh (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers7,269 editsm French production aircraft: - extra paren← Previous edit Revision as of 11:15, 6 August 2006 edit undoPublicgirluk (talk | contribs)58 edits Updating French aircraft historiesNext edit →
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===French production aircraft=== ===French production aircraft===
Air France had seven production aircraft in commercial service: Air France had seven production aircraft in commercial service:
*{{Airreg|F|BTSC|disaster}} (203) was lost in ]. It was featured in the film "]". *{{Airreg|F|BTSC|disaster}} (203) was lost in ] killing 115 people. It was featured in the film "]". It first flew on 31st January 1975 from Toulouse and flew for 11,989 hours.
] ]
*{{Airreg|F|BVFA}} (205) made its final flight to the ] ]'s new ] at ] (USA) on ] ]. *{{Airreg|F|BVFA}} (205) First flew on 27th October 1976 from Toulouse. In 1988 it flew around the world in a record breaking (at the time) 41 hours 27 minutes. It made its final flight to the ] ]'s new ] at ] (USA) on ] ] and flying 17,824 hours.
*{{Airreg|F|BVFB}} (207) was sold for ] to the ] in ]. It flew to ], in South West Germany on ] ]. After removal of its wings and tail fin, it travelled by barge and road, to join a ] already on exhibit at Sinsheim. *{{Airreg|F|BVFB}} (207) first flew on 6th March 1976 from Toulouse. It was sold for ] to the ] in ]. It flew to ], in South West Germany on ] ]. After removal of its wings and tail fin, it travelled by barge and road, to join a ] already on exhibit at Sinsheim. It has flown 14,771 hours.
*{{Airreg|F|BVFC}} (209) retired to the ] plant at Toulouse (France), where the French aircraft were constructed, on ] ], joining '''201''' and ending Air France's relationship with Concorde. The final flight was supersonic, and included a ] at Toulouse. *{{Airreg|F|BVFC}} (209) first flew on 9th July 1876 from Toulouse. It was retired to the ] plant at Toulouse (France), where the French aircraft were constructed, on ] ], joining '''201''' and ending Air France's relationship with Concorde. The final flight was supersonic, and included a ] at Toulouse. It had flown 14,332 hours.
*{{Airreg|F|BVFD}} (211) was retired early, in ], having flown only 5,821 hours. Badly corroded after being stored outdoors, and damaged through use as a source of spare parts, it was broken up in ]. *{{Airreg|F|BVFD}} (211) first flew on 10th February 1977 from Toulouse. It was retired early, in ], having flown only 5,814 hours (final flight on 27th May 1982. Badly corroded after being stored outdoors, and damaged through use as a source of spare parts, it was broken up in ].
*{{Airreg|F|BTSD}} (213) retired to the Air and Space museum at Le Bourget (France) on ] ], joining '''001'''. In ], this aircraft carried a promotional paint scheme for ]. *{{Airreg|F|BTSD}} (213) first flew on 26th June 1978 from Toulouse. It was retired to the Air and Space museum at Le Bourget (France) on ] ], joining '''001''' after flying 12,974 hours. In ], this aircraft carried a promotional paint scheme (blue with logo) for ]. It flew subsonic flights (the plane requires a white livery to fly supersonic due to the heat) around the Middle East and is estimated to have cost Pepsi $20 Million. (213) also holds the world record for flying around the world in both directions. Westbound in 32 hours 49 minutes and 3 seconds on 12/13 October 1992 and Eastbound in 31 hours 27 minutes and 49 seconds on 15/16 August 1995
*{{Airreg|F|BVFF}} (215) remains on display at ] in ], being cosmetically reassembled, after the withdrawal of the type was announced mid-way through refurbishment. *{{Airreg|F|BVFF}} (215) first flew on 26th December 1978 from Toulouse. It remains on display at ] in ], being cosmetically reassembled, after the withdrawal of the type was announced mid-way through refurbishment. It last flew on a charter flight to Paris Charles de Gaulle on 11th June 2000 after flying 12,421 hours


===British production aircraft=== ===British production aircraft===

Revision as of 11:15, 6 August 2006

Twenty Concorde aircraft were built, six for development and 14 for commercial service.

These were:

  • two prototypes
  • two pre-production aircraft
  • 16 production aircraft
    • The first two of these did not enter commercial service
    • Of the 14 which flew commercially, 12 were still in service in April 2003

All but two of these aircraft - a remarkably high percentage for any commercial fleet - are preserved.

Prototypes

The two prototype aircraft were used to expand the flight envelope of the aircraft as quickly as possible and prove that the design calculations for supersonic flight were correct.

  • F-WTSS (production designation 001) was the first Concorde to fly, on 2 March 1969, and was retired on arrival at the French Air Museum at Le Bourget Airport (France) on 19 October 1973, having made 397 flights covering 812 hours, of which 255 hours were at supersonic speeds.
  • G-BSST (002) first flew on 9th April 1969 from Filton UK to RAF Fairford UK. It's last flight was on the 4th March 1976 when it flew to the Fleet Air Arm Museum at the Royal Naval Air Station Yeovilton (England) on 4 March 1976. It had made 438 flights (836 hours), of which 196 flights were supersonic.

Pre-production aircraft

Both production aircraft were used to further develop the design of the aircraft. Changes to design include different wing plan form, more fuel, different engine standard, different air intake systems etc.

  • Concorde G-AXDN (101) first flew on 17th December 1971 from Filton and was retired to the Duxford Aviation Museum (England), where it landed on 20 August 1977, having made 269 flights (632 hours), of which 168 flights were supersonic.
  • Concorde F-WTSA (102) first flew on 10th January 1973 from Toulouse. Iwas the fourth aircraft and the first to have the dimensions and the shape of the future production aircraft. It was the first to fly to the United States (20th September 1973 Dallas Texas). For several years the aircraft was painted in British Airways colours on one side and Air France colours on the other. It made 314 flights (656 hours), of which 189 supersonic and was then retired to Orly Airport in Paris on 20 May 1976, where it is on display to the public.

Development aircraft

The production aircraft were different in many ways to the orginal aircraft necessitating re-examining certain areas to obtain certification. In all there were six "development" aircraft. The two prototypes (001/002), the two pre-production (101/102) and two production aircraft (201/202)

  • F-WTSB (201) first flew on 6th December 1973 from Toulouse. It's last flight was on 19th April 1985 from Chateauroux to Toulouse flying a total of 909 hours. It is currently outside the Airbus factory at Toulouse (France).
  • G-BBDG (202) first flew on 13th Decemebr 1974 from Filton to RAF Fairford. It last flew on 24 December 1981 after a total of 1282 hours. Subsequently it was stored in a hangar on the Filton Airfield and was used as a spare parts source by BA for their Concorde fleet. It was sectioned & moved by road in May/June 2004 to the Brooklands museum site in Weybridge, Surrey. It is now being restored. (Details here.)
    • There is an unverified story amongst British Aerospace staff that the last flight of the Filton airplane was on a contract to the UK Ministry of Defence, to see if a supersonic jet of that size would be radar visible heading over Iceland and down towards the UK from the West; a test of the country's radar defences against the then-new Tupolev Tu-160 'Blackjack' bomber. However, the flight test logs show the final flights of G-BBDG as being test flights being related to Primary Nozzle Control (PNC) development work, which was a planned post entry into service development area.

French production aircraft

Air France had seven production aircraft in commercial service:

  • F-BTSCdisaster (203) was lost in the Paris crash killing 115 people. It was featured in the film "The Concorde: Airport '79". It first flew on 31st January 1975 from Toulouse and flew for 11,989 hours.
File:DSCF0226.JPG
Concorde F-BVFA on display at Smithsonian Institution National Air and Space Museum's Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in Chantilly, Virginia, USA.
  • F-BVFA (205) First flew on 27th October 1976 from Toulouse. In 1988 it flew around the world in a record breaking (at the time) 41 hours 27 minutes. It made its final flight to the Smithsonian Institution National Air and Space Museum's new Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center at Washington Dulles International Airport (USA) on 12 June 2003 and flying 17,824 hours.
  • F-BVFB (207) first flew on 6th March 1976 from Toulouse. It was sold for €1 to the Sinsheim Auto & Technik Museum in Germany. It flew to Karlsruhe-Baden–Baden Airpark, in South West Germany on 24 June 2003. After removal of its wings and tail fin, it travelled by barge and road, to join a Tupolev Tu-144 already on exhibit at Sinsheim. It has flown 14,771 hours.
  • F-BVFC (209) first flew on 9th July 1876 from Toulouse. It was retired to the Airbus plant at Toulouse (France), where the French aircraft were constructed, on 27 June 2003, joining 201 and ending Air France's relationship with Concorde. The final flight was supersonic, and included a go around at Toulouse. It had flown 14,332 hours.
  • F-BVFD (211) first flew on 10th February 1977 from Toulouse. It was retired early, in 1982, having flown only 5,814 hours (final flight on 27th May 1982. Badly corroded after being stored outdoors, and damaged through use as a source of spare parts, it was broken up in 1994.
  • F-BTSD (213) first flew on 26th June 1978 from Toulouse. It was retired to the Air and Space museum at Le Bourget (France) on 14 June 2003, joining 001 after flying 12,974 hours. In 1996, this aircraft carried a promotional paint scheme (blue with logo) for Pepsi. It flew subsonic flights (the plane requires a white livery to fly supersonic due to the heat) around the Middle East and is estimated to have cost Pepsi $20 Million. (213) also holds the world record for flying around the world in both directions. Westbound in 32 hours 49 minutes and 3 seconds on 12/13 October 1992 and Eastbound in 31 hours 27 minutes and 49 seconds on 15/16 August 1995
  • F-BVFF (215) first flew on 26th December 1978 from Toulouse. It remains on display at Charles de Gaulle International Airport in Paris, being cosmetically reassembled, after the withdrawal of the type was announced mid-way through refurbishment. It last flew on a charter flight to Paris Charles de Gaulle on 11th June 2000 after flying 12,421 hours

British production aircraft

BA also had seven production aircraft in commercial service:

Concorde G-BOAB in storage at London (Heathrow) Airport, following the end of all Concorde flights
  • G-BOAB (208) remains at Heathrow Airport. It was never modified, and so never flew again after returning home following the Paris crash.
  • G-BOAC (204) The flagship of the fleet (because of its BOAC registration) made its final flight to Manchester International Airport viewing park, where special "glass hangar" will be built for its display, on 31 October 2003. Its maiden flight was on 27 February 1975.
  • G-BOAD (210) departed from Heathrow for the final time on 10 November, and flew to JFK airport in New York, from where it was then transferred (on a barge originally used to move Space shuttle external fuel tanks), to the Intrepid Sea-Air-Space Museum, New York (USA), past the Statue of Liberty and up the Hudson River. Its engines were removed to reduce weight. Its temporary home is on a barge alongside the aircraft carrier Intrepid, pending the proposed creation of a quayside display hall.
  • G-BOAE (212) flew to Grantley Adams Airport in Bridgetown (Barbados) on 17 November, with 70 members of BA staff on board. The flight, lasting less than 4 hours, reached the maximum certified height of 60,000 ft (18,300 m). A new exhibition facility will be constructed to house the aircraft, east of the airport at the old Spencers Plantation. Barbados Concorde museum design:
  • G-BOAF (216), the last Concorde to be built, made Concorde's final ever flight on Wednesday 26 November 2003. Departing from Heathrow at 11:30 GMT, it made a last, brief, supersonic flight, carrying 100 BA flight crew, over the Bay of Biscay. It then flew a "lap of honour" above Bristol, passing over Portishead, Clevedon, Weston-super-Mare, Bristol International Airport and Clifton Suspension Bridge, before landing at Filton, soon after 13:00 GMT. It was met by Prince Andrew, who formally accepted its handover. The aircraft will be the star feature of the proposed Bristol Aviation Heritage Museum. Not originally part of BA's order, G-BOAF was bought by them for 1 FFR in the 1980s.
Concorde G-BOAG at the Museum of Flight.
  • G-BOAG (214), the aircraft that flew the final Speedbird 2 service from New York on 24 October, left Heathrow for the final time on 3 November 2003. It spent a day "resting" and refuelling in New York before making an unusual supersonic flight (which required special permission) over the uninhabited part of northern Canada, to Seattle, where it is currently displayed at the Museum of Flight, alongside the first 707 that served as Air Force One and the prototype Boeing 747. This Concorde was once used as a source of spares, before being restored using parts from Air France's F-BVFD.

External links

  1. "G-INFO Database". Civil Aviation Authority.
  2. "G-INFO Database". Civil Aviation Authority.
  3. "G-INFO Database". Civil Aviation Authority.
  4. "G-INFO Database". Civil Aviation Authority.
  5. "G-INFO Database". Civil Aviation Authority.
  6. "G-INFO Database". Civil Aviation Authority.
  7. "G-INFO Database". Civil Aviation Authority.
  8. "G-INFO Database". Civil Aviation Authority.
  9. "G-INFO Database". Civil Aviation Authority.
  10. "G-INFO Database". Civil Aviation Authority.
  11. "G-INFO Database". Civil Aviation Authority.
  12. "G-INFO Database". Civil Aviation Authority.
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