Concordski: What ever
happened to Soviets' spectacular rival to Concorde?
Updated 29th September 2017
1 / 14 -The Tupolev Tu-144 was the Soviet rival to the Anglo-French Concorde,
but its rushed development made it notoriously unreliable and unpleasant to
fly.AFP/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
When the Soviet
rival to the Concorde made its first foreign appearance at the Paris Air Show
in 1971, everyone was impressed. In the heated race to develop a supersonic
passenger jet, it was the USSR who got off to a head start.
French President
Georges Pompidou, foregoing nationalism, called it "a
beautiful plane." The makers of the Concorde itself conceded that it was
"quieter and cleaner."
The Tupolev Tu-144
looked very similar to its Anglo-French competitor -- which inevitably earned
it the nickname "Concordski" -- but it was somewhat more exotic and
mysterious. And the Soviets' track record in aerospace demanded respect: that
same year, they had achieved the first probe-landing on Mars and launched the
first space station. They seemed perfectly positioned to beat the West on
supersonic passenger travel.
Instead, through a
mix of shortcomings and bad luck, the Concordski would soon turn into one of
civil aviation's biggest failures.
The race for supersonic
flight
Although it's the
Concorde that earned a place in history, the lesser known Tu-144 beat it to the
skies twice: it had its maiden flight on Dec. 31, 1968 -- two months before the
Concorde -- and then achieved its first supersonic flight in June 1969, beating
the competition by four months.
These were no small
victories. The Americans were out of the supersonic race (Congress had canceled funding to a similar
Boeing project in 1971), but the program was still a badge of honor for the
Soviet Union.
A Tu-144 on display
at Moscow's international airport in 1968. Credit: Bettmann/Bettmann/Bettmann Archive
Every effort was
made to outshine the Concorde: "Development started in the midst of a
rivalry between two political systems," Ilya Grinberg, a Soviet aviation
expert and engineering professor at Buffalo State University, said in an email.
"Expectations were high. The entire USSR was extremely proud of the
Tu-144, and the Soviet people had no doubt that it was better than Concorde.
And it was so pretty!"
Both planes were
clearly ahead of their time, as civil aviation had barely just transitioned
from props to jets. But their striking similarities have long fueled spy
stories: "The design of the Tupolev was not a result of espionage.
Although they look alike, they are rather different planes with many different
aspects. External similarities are based on functional criteria and required
parameters. But it is certainly possible that familiarity with the outlines of
Concorde could have influenced some conceptual decisions," said Grinberg.
The Tupolev was
slightly bigger and faster than the Concorde, but its most distinctive feature
was a pair of "canards" or winglets right behind the cockpit, which
provided extra lift and improved handling at low speeds.
A crash over Paris
After stealing the
show at the biggest event in the aviation industry in 1971, the Tu-144 did it
again in 1973, but due to tragedy rather than triumph.
The rivals were once
again squaring off. The Concorde completed its demonstration first, without a
hitch, but the Tupolev put on a far more audacious show, with twists and turns
that proved to be fatal: the aircraft broke up in midair and crashed into the
village of Goussainville, killing six on board and eight on the ground.
The ill-fated TU-144
shortly before it exploded and crashed. Credit: Keystone/Hulton Archive/Getty Images
An outlandish
conspiracy theory claims the Tupolev crashed to avoid collision with a french
Mirage fighter that was trying to photograph it, but Grinberg is
quick to dismiss it: "The Mirage had nothing to do with that crash. It was
just speculation to divert attention from the real cause, which was drastic
maneuvering of the Tu-144 that exceeded allowable stress limits."
Footage of the crash shows the Tupolev going
into a nosedive, presumably to reignite the engines after they had flamed out.
Under too much pressure, the wings broke off.
"The pilots
attempted to impress the public and the world's press, to show that the Soviet
plane could be 'sexier' than the more conservative display of the Concorde.
That's quite clear from the footage."
55 flights
That was the start
of a downward spiral from which the Tu-144 never recovered. The Paris crash
delayed the Soviet program by four years, allowing the Concorde to enter
service first. But it didn't entirely convince the Soviets that the plane
needed more testing.
"Political
priorities to overcome the West, no matter what, obviously played a negative
role, as they favored rushing over proper scheduling in a highly challenging
and complicated field," said Grinberg.
When it finally
started flying passengers in 1977, the Tu-144 turned out to be cramped, prone
to breaking and unbearably noisy because -- unlike the Concorde -- it could
only sustain supersonic speeds using afterburners, like military aircraft:
"A flight on the Tu-144 was not for those with sensitive hearing"
Jonathan Glancey wrote in his book "Concorde."
The cabin of a
Tu-144. Credit: Miroslav Zaj/CORBIS/Corbis via
Getty Images
Aeroflot used the
Tu-144 to serve the rather obscure two-hour route between Moscow and Alma Ata
(now Almaty), then capital of Kazakhstan, chosen because it passed over
sparsely populated areas. But the weekly flights were mostly half-empty and the
plane ended up transporting more cargo and mail than people. The service was canceled after six
months.
In its short life as
a passenger plane -- only 55 return flights -- the Tu-144
suffered hundreds of failures, many of them inflight, ranging from
depressurization to engine failure to blaring alarms that couldn't be switched
off. All sorts of stories have surfaced over the years about the plane's woes,
including reports that passengers had to communicate through written notes
because of the deafening noise. Perhaps more tellingly, each flight from Moscow
could only depart after the aircraft had been personally inspected by the plane's
designer, Alexei Tupolev himself.
"The country as
a whole was not ready to deploy planes like this. It had teething problems, it
was not economical, and ultimately there was no real need for high-speed
passenger transportation," said Grinberg.
The end of an era
The Tu-144 was
already on its way out when another fatal crash happened. On May 23, 1978, one
caught fire near Moscow and made an emergency landing during which
two flight engineers were killed. Although the accident prompted a complete ban
on passenger flights, the real reason for the plane's demise lay elsewhere.
"It was loss of
interest in the program by the Soviet leadership as well as Aeroflot top brass.
They've had enough of the headaches associated with this highly complex
program. There were no real economic incentives to use it in the Soviet
domestic markets," said Grinberg.
Over the next few
years, without much fanfare, the plane was quietly retired and production of
new aircraft was stopped. The program was finally grounded in 1984. In
total, just 17 Tu-144s were produced, including prototypes. Most were scrapped, but a few are on display in aviation
museums in Russia and Germany.
The very last flight
of the Tu-144 happened in 1999, thanks to NASA, which sponsored a three-year
joint US-Russian research program on supersonic
flight. The aircraft used was the last Tu-144 ever built, which had logged just
82 flight hours. It was flown 27 times near Moscow before the program was
canned due to lack of funds.
The Tu-144LL
supersonic flying laboratory at the Zhukovsky Air Development Center near
Moscow in 1997. Credit: NASA
Tupolev briefly
tinkered with the idea of a successor, called Tu-244, but never actually built one. The Concorde
itself last flew in 2003, but it was doomed since its only fatal accident in 2000, which killed 113 near Paris -- not far
from where the first Tu-144 crashed in 1973.
Many other
supersonic planes have been proposed since, but none have made it to
production. "I do not foresee one anytime soon. In the age of Internet and
real-time video conferences there is no need for high-speed transportation for
business purposes," said Grinberg.
"It is a pity
that the Tu-144 and the Concorde have left the skies. Despite economic
constraints and notwithstanding basic necessities, people need a dream, such as
traveling at supersonic speed in comfort. Not the worst dream to have, I suppose."
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