Supersonic jets can fly
from New York to L.A. in 2.5 hours (or less)
Lockheed supersonic
jet
An illustration of Lockheed's N+2 concept
aircraft, one of many that may return supersonic service to passenger air
travel.
The super rich may soon be going
supersonic.
Over a decade after the Concorde made its last transatlantic
flight, a number of companies are working on the next generation of supersonic
passenger aircraft capable of speeds at least twice as fast as current
commercial planes.
These planes will likely first appear in the private
and business jet market.
It's the "corporate jets and the very rich who would
value the speed and pay a high price," said Andrew Goldberg, CEO of Metropolis
Group, an investment firm with expertise in the aerospace sector.
At least
two companies are currently working on such planes.
Reno, Nevada, based Aerion is
developing a $110 million, 12-passenger business jet capable of hitting Mach 1.6
-- or over 1,200 miles per hour. That's roughly twice as fast as the $65 million
Gulfstream G650, and would cut the travel time between New York and London from
seven hours to just over four.
"There's a business case and a demand for
this," said Jeff Miller, Aerion's head of marketing and communication. "People
want to get places faster."
aerion
supersonic
A rendering of Aerion's AS2 supersonic
business jet.
The company has deposits from
dozens of customers and recently signed an agreement for technical assistance
with Airbus -- the company that, in an earlier incarnation, built the Concorde.
They hope to deliver the first plane in 2022.
Boston-based Spike Aerospace
is working on a similar plane that would also carry business passengers at a
speed of Mach 1.6. The company boasts on its website that flying on the plane
"will make any other jet feel like flying on a prop plane."
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