Oh, Your Private Jet Is Just Subsonic? 311
zerogeewhiz writes "Found this article here at The Sydney Morning Herald . It seems that Bill and his mates need to move a bit quicker these days and for a cool US$80 million, you too can overtake the Concorde on a dash to Harrods for dinner.
As described in the article, the main complaint about Concorde is that it can only fly supersonic over water and creates those nasty sonic booms that punch holes in buildings and shatter windows. They reckon they can get rid of these waves by making the plane longer. These are gonna be fast but hideous. 737-700s are suddenly passe as a corporate jet..."
Why would any Microsoftie need a faster jet? (Score:2, Funny)
Ahh, nevermind.
Re:Why would any Microsoftie need a faster jet? (Score:2)
BTW The fastest current private Jet is the Cessna Citation X, it cruises at Mach 0.92. It is infact the fastest civilian jet except the concorde.
Cessna aircraft company [cessna.com]
Re:Why would any Microsoftie need a faster jet? (Score:2)
Well maybe because they are not useing it to admin a box. But to have a meeting.
Clearly you haven't been paying attention to The Great Katz [slashdot.org]. Just use email.
Or the telephone.
Re:Why would any Microsoftie need a faster jet? (Score:2)
I'll bet that 90% of the people who buy one made their money out of fat corporate welfare handouts.
"Bill and his mates"? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:"Bill and his mates"? (Score:2, Funny)
About private jet economics and lifestyle (Score:5, Informative)
Larry Ellison, on the other hand, will buy the first one available, the microsecond it comes up. And Warren Buffet will buy a few for his Executive Jet fleet.
You can charter a Gulfstream V for $8,500 per flight hour, which means a transcontinental flight would cost about $ 38,000. Skyjet.com reports round trip charters on an IV at $60,000 for the same flight. Ownership is, of course, mind-bendingly expensive; a Gulfstream V is in the $45 million range, and the Citation X (fastest bizjet around, but less luxurious and with half the passenger capacity) is $18m. You also need a full-time pilot and copilot, together with very expensive maintenance, all of which amounts to an overhead of tens of thousands of dollars a month.
After being squeezed in like a sausage in the USAIR tourist class cabin, I can very much see the appeal of having your own jet. I'm sure that if I was as rich as Bill or Larry, a jet would be one of the first things I'd get. Bear in mind that the Gulfstream has a top speed of Mach
The aforementioned Citation X is about 100 knots (or 25%) faster than a typical commercial flight, and you can arrive at a general aviation airport about 15 minutes before takeoff. Since general aviation airports are most likely a lot closer to you than commercial ones, you can save literally hours by just getting there in ten minutes and taking off almost immediately instead of taking an hour to get to the airport and taking off an hour later. This speed and flexibility is the jet's main advantage compared to, say, simply buying a first-class ticket on a scheduled airline.
In other words, if your time is worth a lot, you probably want a jet. And if you can fill it to capacity, it's not that much more expensive than first-class airfare. A Gulfstream IV can fit 19 people; first-class airfare coast to coast is about $3,068 for a non-stop flight. So if you're paying $60,000 for your round trip flight, you're paying $3,157 per person instead of $ 3,068 for first class; not too shabby.
(I spent quite a bit of time flying with a friend who owned a small propeller plane, so I can attest first-hand to the ease and convenience of general aviation airports. Sadly, I have yet to fly on a private jet).
D
Re:About private jet economics and lifestyle (Score:2)
1) It goes when you want to not when the airline wants it to.
2) You can go to a lot of smaller GA airports that the airlines don't fly into. So instead of flying to a hub then renting a car and driving for 2 hrs you might be able to go direct.
3) You can skip the hubs. There are over 5,000 airports in the USA. In a GA plane you can go to any of them. OK the jets can't get into many of the smaller ones. But if you need to get say Berlin NH (I think there is an airport there) or somewhere like that where there is no airline service it is a major win.
Hell it can even be a major win in something like a Cessna 172 which flys at about 105kts.
Re:About private jet economics and lifestyle (Score:2)
But the interior resembles an early 1980s Subaru - the same cramped cabin, the same lousy seats and the same flimsy feel. (If you push your finger on the skin of a Mooney, it will flex underneath).
The King Air would be a lot more comfortable, but as you well know, there's something dead sexy about a jet. However, I should probably consider the Citation X over the Gulfstream V, even if Larry and Steve swear by the latter. It's a bit faster and should be far cheaper to run.
D
Re:About private jet economics and lifestyle (Score:2)
If you really want to be cool (er, save time), a jet helicopter is for you... :)
I can't tell you how unbelievably cool it was to rip down the Charles in Digital's Bell Jet Ranger, and swoop up over Air Force One to land at Logan (Clinton fouling Boston traffic even more than usual is why we got the ride in the first place).
Re:About private jet economics and lifestyle (Score:2)
Sadly, I have yet to fly on a private jet
I have and I can say without a doubt that being a billionaire would be pretty cool :-) I work for $LARGE_COMPANY which owns many aircraft, including 2 Lear jets for internal corporate use. We have a few flights that we run regularly just because we do it so much that it is cost effective compared to commercial flight. A typical trip would be to drive to our own corporate hanger, walk through to the jet, taxi and take off right on schedule, land and hop out at the jetway (not a terminal) and be driving off in a rental car within a few minutes. Oh, and the leather seating in the Lear is nice, too. After doing this a couple of times, I can say with some authority that the normal delayed, crowded, sardine can commercial flights well and truly suck.
Re:About private jet economics and lifestyle (Score:2)
Likewise. I haven't taken a trip on my company's Learjets yet, but have flown in their King Air a number of times. I've also flown commercial when their aircraft weren't available, and the differences are amazing.
Commercial: Arrive at airport. Check in. Xray luggage. Wait half an hour if you time it right. Whoops, airplane is behind schedule. Wait another hour. Board. Strap yourself into flimsy uncomfortable seat with 80 other people. Fan yourself with magazine because it's too damn hot in there. Wait another half hour. Takeoff. Eventually, land at another airport, wait 3 more hours and repeat above procedure. Arrive at destination.
Private: Arrive at airport. Board plane immediately. At worst, wait 5 minutes because you got there early. Hand baggage to pilots, climb aboard and get lost in the plush leather seating. Take shoes off, lean seat back and put your feet up on the seat in front of you. Temperature is perfect. If not, tell pilots to turn the AC on and get instant gratification. Hungry? Grab some peanuts, chips, doughnuts, or whatever. Thirsty? If you can think of it, they've probably got it, including hard alcohol. Enjoy the luxury and arrive at destination refreshed and ready to go.
Nothing compares to flying in a nice, private aircraft. The trips I've taken were $600 commercial. It costs them ~$1500 to fly the King Air on that route including fuel & pilots. So if three people fly (the plane holds 9 plus pilot/copilot) the company saves money. Actually, if one person flies they save money, because it's a 1 hour (one way) direct trip. Commercial takes 4+ hours (one way) and time is money.
Re:About private jet economics and lifestyle (Score:3, Insightful)
In this case it had very little** to do with the aircraft; we were impressed with their Quality Assurance system at the plant. BUT, if the team sent to audit the plant had consisted of a bunch of muddle-headed artsie craftsies with MBAs then I could easily see them being swayed by the possibility of more such rides, and the free steak dinners, and the liquor, and... I have got to schedule more supplier reviews.
Anyway, properly used a corprate jet can be a great tool for the sales staff in addition to transporting a companies own people. Winning one big sales account for this company could easily pay the annual maintenance and salaries to support that plane (yes, I know how expensive that is).
* A little word of advice to younger engineers; never trust a supplier's ISO, QS, or other certification. Remember how much stuff the auditor missed on your audit? They did the same thing for your suppliers. If quality is important then check them yourself.
** It did let us take the trip sooner than if we had driven or scheduled commerical flights; so they wound up getting the contract sooner than they otherwise would have been able to. But that comes back to just getting from Point A to B. Plus we were in a better mood at their plant than if we had taken conventional travel and could spend more time there. That allowed us to do a more thorough audit than we probably otherwise would have, but since these guys had a 1st rate facility that helped them more than it hurt them.
Re:About private jet economics and lifestyle (Score:2)
I know I'd be ready to savage a company if I got there through a standard full economy-class flight. Just as a way to prevent that from happening, the corporate jet probably paid for itself.
D
Re:About private jet economics and lifestyle (Score:2)
In that context, sending out a private jet to pick potential customers up seems like a bloody good idea. And I'm sure there are plenty of PHB-type customers all over the place.
Not, of course, meant as any implied criticism of your team, which I'm sure does a great job. But, surprising as it may seem to technical people, that's not how things are sold. Big-ticket items are normally sold based on relationships between people, and if a jet ride or two can bond even one or two accounts to the company, it will have paid for itself.
D
Re:About private jet economics and lifestyle (Score:2, Informative)
Er. The Gulfstream V is a Gulfstream IV with an extended fuselage. The Gulfstream IV is somewhat narrow, and they haven't widened it because they want to keep the larger windows. (And when I say larger, I mean larger; the windows are ovular and about 2 to 2.5 times the size of the normal ones you see on commercial jets.)
The larger windows are part of an old series of planes with the FAA used to allow but have since grandfathered. You can't use the larger windows on new planes unless if you're using the exact same fuselage as was previously allowed; extending the fuselage was allowed, however, hence the Gulfstream V, which has a larger capacity and I think also more powerful engines, but is just as narrow as a Gulfstream IV. But what a view out of those windows; when you're cruising at 6-12 thousand feet over the coastline of the pacific, it's absolutely gorgeous.
There's other advantages to owning a private jet, in addition to the time advantage, but money isn't one of them. Not having to deal with all the other passengers is a big one. Having your own private movie system, complete with DVD players and VCRs and screens for each seat, is a nice perk. Being able to see flight information, like how high you are, what your ground speed is, and ETA is especially nice. On-board private fax, modem, ethernet, A/C outlets, etc. etc. But like I said, you won't be saving money by having your own jet, no matter how much you travel. Feul, landing fees, storage, maintenance, crew, all add up. Not to mention the millions that you pay just to own the jet. But fortunately, most private jet manufacturers artificially inflate the price over the years, to create inflation. With light to moderate use you'll get most of the cost of the jet back when you sell it, assuming you've paid for regular maintenance, of course.
Most private vehicles tend to be bad investments unless if you're using them to sell rides (e.g. busses, taxis, commercial airlines, trains, etc.). It's much more economical to go commercial than to buy a private jet, no matter how much or how little you use it (similarly, it's much more economical to ride the bus than to own a car). But the time savings and comfort level are phenomenal.
Re:About private jet economics and lifestyle (Score:2)
I suppose at a bare minimum there should be Inmarsat B, a worldwide but incredibly pricey system.
D
Re:About private jet economics and lifestyle (Score:2)
1. Much higher flexibility in terms of travel schedules. By no longer being tied down to airline schedules they can go anywhere in the world often at a few hour's notice. With the arrival of the long-range Gulfstream V and Bombardier Global Express business jets, most of the world is easily within one fuel stop of anywhere in the continental USA. For example, if Apple CEO Steve Jobs needs to be in Singapore on business, he could fly his private Gulfstream V there from its likely home airport (San Jose International Airport) with only one fuel stop in Japan.
2. Private jets offer security and privacy not possible with commercial flights. Many famous Hollywood celebrities now fly private jets to avoid the security headaches to moving them through commercial airport terminals. Besides, many Hollywood celebrities have their own private jets, too. Think about it: would you want to subject a star like Michael Jackson to the public spaces of airport terminals and all the security headaches that implies?
Re:About private jet economics and lifestyle (Score:2)
And then sue San Jose Airport to force them to let him land or take off at any time of the day or night he damn well pleases.
You missed one significant part of the finances of private jet ownership, hiring it out. Very few corporate jet owners make enough use of the thing to justify the cost and hassle. If you think waiting in an airport is bad then try buying a plane - hint maintenance, insurance, employing 2 pilots etc.
The reason it makes sense is that you can lease your private plane to a 'management company' that handles all the tedious stuff for you and in addition leases the plane out to other people when you are not using it. If you only use the plane occasionally it can be a lucrative source of income.
Re:About private jet economics and lifestyle (Score:2)
D
Re:About private jet economics and lifestyle (Score:2, Funny)
So you can keep taking off and landing and move further and further back into the past? Now thats a neat plane, guess it doesn't matter how fast it actually moves through the air if its got a flux capacitor fitted.
Re:About private jet economics and lifestyle (Score:2)
You'd arrive at the airport you'd be departing from 15 minutes before takeoff, of course. I'm sure you knew that already, though.
D
Re:About private jet economics and lifestyle (Score:2)
It probably costs somewhat less per flight hour if you own your jet and use it enough (over 400 flight hours a year, or about three coast to coast round trips a month).
Most of us would be way better off biting the bullet and flying First Class commercial, but there is definitely something very attractive about jet ownership. And, even if you compare it to first class, you will still save a lot of time. As I grow older and wiser, I start to appreciate that more (not, sad to say, that I am even vaguely close to being able to afford $60,000 flights just yet).
D
I wouldn't be so hard on Steve (Score:2)
And quite honestly, I think that's worth a jet. Did you know Steve has to pay for his own maintenance? That surprised me a bit, since that's one of the most beneficial things to have under a corporate umbrella.
D
Re:About private jet economics and lifestyle (Score:2)
What's the difference between the V and V-SP? The V-SP's spec sheet isn't available as HTML yet
D
Re:About private jet economics and lifestyle (Score:2)
Anyone know about the pros and cons of that?
D
(Amusingly enough, I think the original parent to this discussion is my most popular Slashdot post ever. Obviously a lot of people are interested in corporate jets. This says some really unpleasant things about commercial aviation which, alas, I think are entirely justified).
Re:About private jet economics and lifestyle (Score:2)
The small private plane looks real good to get to Vegas, just as you say.
D
Re:"Bill and his mates"? (Score:2)
Secondly, I think the main reference was just made because Bill is one of the few people who could afford an $80,000,000 jet. In fact anytime ANYBODY wants to make a reference to being wealthy they use Bill Gates. "$100 a head?! What am I.. Bill Gates!", etc. etc. etc.
Maybe the problem is you see everything as an insult towards Microsoft when it really isn't.
Re:"Bill and his mates"? (Score:2)
What BETTER person would a comment about frivolous spending by the rich be targeted at, than the richest one?
(Omitting, of course, that one rarely becomes rich by spending frivolously, but rather by hoarding and spending only where there's a return on investment)
Re:"Bill and his mates"? (Score:2)
I guess I'm just saying that it's not always MS bashing when BillG gets mentioned. There's other reasons to select him as examples.
Re:"Bill and his mates"? (Score:2)
D
Re:"Bill and his mates"? (Score:2)
I think the point is that if you were to make a list of people who could afford to plop down $80 million for a plane without batting an eyelash, and then were to sort the list by order of name recognition, Bill Gates would be at the top of that list. BFD -- Slashdot took a horrible, horrible potshot at Bill by implying that he's rich. Next they'll start accusing Stephen Hawking of understanding physics.
Re:"Bill and his mates"? (Score:2)
Re:"Bill and his mates"? (Score:2, Informative)
Extending Length to PREVENT Sonic Booms? (Score:4, Interesting)
Has new technology been developed with regards to this?
Re:Extending Length to PREVENT Sonic Booms? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Extending Length to PREVENT Sonic Booms? (Score:5, Informative)
* The "intensity" (read: energy) of a boom is proportional (roughly) to the speed of the aircraft and the angle of attack of the wing or fuselage.
* To lower the energy wasted in a sonic boom, you can either go slower (neah...) or lower the angle of attack. For a wing, this is kinda easy: either sweep it back (notice a how much further back a fighter's wings are than an airliner's?) or make it thinner (so that the cross-sectional angle of attack, so to speak, is less).
* For a fuselage it gets trickier: a fighter need only fit one person, and you can extend the nose long enough to lower the leading angle of attack. And you don't care about traling shocks or really shocks at all, because you're in a fighter. You're supposed to terrify people.
* But for a commercial jet, you will have to take care of both ends of the fuselage, and the only way is to make them longer, and have them taper out smoother. Look at the Concorde's absurdly long nose (so long, it has to be pivoted so that the pilots can see the runway at take-offs and landings) and its thin tail. Now, you know why they're there.
Supersonic business jets have always been possible. However, new, more efficient engines and cheaper high performance materials are only now making them affordable (well, relatively at least
Re:Extending Length to PREVENT Sonic Booms? (Score:2)
And I don't see why my answer is nonsense (simplified maybe, but not wrong). If you worked for Gulfstream, maybe you can back it up, aero engineer to aero engineer.
Re:Extending Length to PREVENT Sonic Booms? (Score:2, Informative)
There is actually a way to soften the sonic boom by lenghtnening the plane.
What makes a sharp sonic boom is the dissipation of a lot of energy over a small distance. You can't do much to lower the energy of a plane's shockwave when it reaches Mach 1, but you can expand the area over which that energy will be concentrated. This is done by lenghtening the cone-shaped high-pressure shockwave that surrounds the plane.
This way, the shockwave's pressure gradient is spread over a longer surface (roughly a cone starting from the tip of the plane), and thus, with the same pressure difference over a bigger distance, the gradient is lower.
The sonic boom's enery is the same, but since it's spread over a longer distance and hence a longer time, it gives less instantaneous power. So you have a flattened pulse that is theoretically muffled, instead of a sharp spike. (If you want to visualize the concept, burn a candle, then explode a hand grenade. See, the total energy was roughly the same, but the grenade produced it in a sharp spike.)
The resulting experimental plane looks like the old supersonic fighters of the 60's, with a cone tip that looks way too long for modern standards.
There was an article about this in Aviation Week but their web site is subscribers only.
Concorde Avionics (or lack thereof) (Score:4, Interesting)
Even the B-52H [aol.com] has a nice modernized cockpit with screens galore. If that old clunker can be up to date, there's no reason why a Concorde can't.
Re:Concorde Avionics (or lack thereof) (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Concorde Avionics (or lack thereof) (Score:3, Informative)
People's lives are at stake with the equipment in an aircraft, so you don't want to upgrade simply to make everything look cool.
But you still want to upgrade. Reducing pilot stress is one main factor in improving safety and those cockpit's from the 60's and 70's suck. You should see the cockpit of the infamous Comet, pity I don't have a link... Modern avionics are just as reliable as old dials, but pilots don't like the feel of not having control. I used to fly airplanes (ok, Piper Cherokees) and if I could have a dial showing me tire temperature or rudder angle I'd surely want one, yet usefulness would be highly questionable.
The Concorde is a weird beast, and most things about that airplane are are different. Let me give you two examples:
Cruise flight in a modern airliner is boring. You just supervise a few systems and sip your coffee (or actually sleep, as many pilots acknowledge. Some other things they won't acknowledge...). Not in a Concorde. That airplane burns lots of fuel considering its size, which means weight and CG change considerably during a trip. The flight engineer has to monitor the fuel in the many tanks and transfer it from here to there to maintain the CG where it's supposed to be, which also depends on how the plane is loaded in each trip. Lots of calculations, lots of monitoring. Also, the lighter the airplane, the highest it will fly at optimum fuel consumption. In normal jet aviation you're given a flight level and during the trip you are tipically allowed to switch to a higher level two or three times. The Concorde flies high, above 40.000 ft, where airspace is not controlled, so the pilot can gradually increase altitude during the trip. Actually one *has* to, if consumption is to be kept to the minimum. These are two tasks that should be handled by computers in my opinion, drawing attention from the crew only if something goes out of pre-established parameters.
Re:Concorde Avionics (or lack thereof) (Score:2)
The Concorde flies high, above 40.000 ft, where airspace is not controlled, so the pilot can gradually increase altitude during the trip.
Almost. Class A airspace extends from 18,000 feet to 60,000 feet (Actually, 18,000 feet to FL600, but I digress). Class E airspace overlies Class A, extending from FL600 upward, presumably indefinitely (I have never heard of an official top to that Class E). Class E is also controlled airspace for those aircraft on an IFR flight plan.
Concorde flies in Class A airspace above FL400, so it is controlled. They do climb during cruise, though--instead of a specific altitude, they are cleared to cruise at a "block altitude," an altitude range with a lower and upper limit. Such a clearance might read "maintain between FL390 and 550," which would indicate that the aircraft may be operated between FL390 (approximately 39,000 feet) and FL550 (approx. 55,000').
Incidentally, I mentioned that Class E is only controlled to IFR aircraft; if you are VFR, Class E is uncontrolled (for all practical purposes). Entry into Class A requires that you be on an IFR flight plan, so to climb to the overlying Class E, you would have to be on an IFR flight plan. You can cancel your IFR clearance after leaving Class A, but it would be impractical, and airliners are required to fly IFR at all times anyway, so Concorde would never be uncontrolled, even if it were in Class E airspace.
If it ain't broke... (Score:2)
Re:Concorde Avionics (or lack thereof) (Score:2)
Re:B-52H Avionics (or lack thereof) (Score:2, Informative)
Of course, seeing outside the aircraft is pretty important, too. Especially when you consider that, when these aircraft take off in a nuclear scenario, all the cockpit windows are covered with heavy (and opaque) thermal curtains. The only way the crew can see out is by looking at the CRTs.
For those who might be curious, the B-52H has two cameras mounted just below the nose: an infrared camera, and a visible-light camera. The view from those cameras is displayed on the cockpit CRTs, along with radar-derived terrain-avoidance data. Very handy for skimming the ground at night over hostile territory, with intermittent thermonuclear detonations occuring in the middle distance
Now, for a truly cool-looking glass cockpit, check out the B2 [bombnav.org]. Yours for only $1,999,999,999.95 [Prices are MSRP including delivery, plus any options. Your final price may vary, contact your dealer.]
Formula for Slashdot articles (Score:3, Redundant)
Corporate Interceptor (Score:5, Funny)
for a cool US$80 million, you too can overtake the Concorde on a dash to Harrods for dinner
Er, for that kind of money you might as well pick up a used F-14 Tomcat. It may not have a cushy interior and cleverly-shaped bourbon dispensers, but show me another corporate transport that mounts Phoenix missiles. You'll be envied (and feared) by all your rivals chugging around in those wimpy Learjets.
Re:Corporate Interceptor (Score:2)
They just refuel in the air.
Re:Corporate Interceptor (Score:2, Interesting)
When it was designed in the 1960s, New York to London was big business, and was the kind of range you could make money with. Now it's L.A. to Hong Kong, far beyond Concorde's reach unless you refuel. Which kills the speed advantage.
I've heard Concordes take off from Heathrow, and they are indeed loud. They have that turbojet shriek that you only hear from military jets nowadays.
I still want to ride on one.
...laura
Re:Corporate Interceptor (Score:2)
Re:Corporate Interceptor (Score:2)
Re:Corporate Interceptor (Score:5, Funny)
Actually, a F-14 would be really cool for one really important reason: you can eject when nesessary.
Yep, those high-paid executives do like to bail out when the going gets tough.
What color is YOUR parachute?
Why the Sydney morning herald? (Score:3, Informative)
Newscientist Article (Score:2, Informative)
Sure maybe you've heard a sonic boom.... (Score:2, Informative)
(http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap010221.html for the concerned web surfer)
When I read stuff like this, I can't help but wonder how long it's going to be before we'll all travel at super-sonic speeds for our presonal excursions, not just the ultra-rich.
Bill? (Score:3, Redundant)
Geez, Larry Ellison flies a MiG! And Gates flew in coach, sleeping with a blanket over his head, until the mid 90's, IIRC.
For this kind of money... (Score:5, Interesting)
A dedicated 100-Mb fiber link should be sufficient. Imagine hardball business negotiations in 9-channel Dolby surround sound.
Re:For this kind of money... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:For this kind of money... (Score:2)
Re:For this kind of money... (Score:2)
What happened to "Getting there is half the fun"? (Score:4, Interesting)
Besides, you know how much we get pissed-off when some Yuppie asshole's cell-phone starts ringing when we are trying to enjoy a nice restaurant or theatre performance? "Look at me! I'm so fucking important that I need to disturb everyone around me!" Well that's just going to get a whole lot worse. "Look at me! I'm so fucking important that I need to smash out everyone's windows as I race off to yet another "important" meeting!"
Anyone know where I can get a Patriot missile battery cheap?
Re:What happened to "Getting there is half the fun (Score:2)
Although I've always wanted to ride on the Trans-Siberian Railway. Or the Orient Express. And from what I understand, if you're sight-seeing in Europe, a Eurail pass is hard to beat.
Re:What happened to "Getting there is half the fun (Score:2)
I dunno, but whenever I take Amtrak (which is actually quite frequently -- I go between NY and MA a couple times each semester), there are always a ton of people making and recieving calls on the train. And it really pisses me off when the person sitting behind me starts talking really loudly into eir cellphone. And the conversations are all the same: "Hello... I'm on the train... We're currently in [wherever] and we should be [somewhere else] in about n minutes. Can you come pick me up?" The same damn phonecall (made by a different person) every few minutes. And now Amtrak is starting to advertise that the fact you can use your phone is an advantage of the train over the airplane. Grrr.
But, from Manhattan to where my parents live in southern MA, it's actually quicker to take the train than fly... no getting to/from all these airports and waiting around, and I don't have to make reservations weeks in advance. Now, if all these "service improvements" they've been instituting recently actually improved service, I'd be happy...
Sloppy Reporting (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Sloppy Reporting (Score:2)
Yes, but neither lands in residential areas quite as frequently.
Re:Sloppy Reporting (Score:2)
I might take that bet...
I grew up in North Dakota - stop the "residential" snickering, I'm way ahead of you already - and you had B52's and B1's buzzing around all the time. Always fun to watch them fly over you as they touched down. I'm sure other cities with bases near by shared the same problem. The only place the Concord flew out of was Coastal cities, though at $5K a seat, I don't really know what areas they service.
Re:Sloppy Reporting (Score:2)
Re:Sloppy Reporting (Score:2)
The Space Shuttle makes an essentially negligable contribution to pollution; but it's one of the candidates for dirtiest AND loudest although Saturn V may well be the overall prize winner
The regulation on sonic booms (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.access.gpo.gov/nara/cfr/cfrhtml_00/T
91.817 Civil aircraft sonic boom.
(a) No person may operate a civil aircraft in the United States at a true flight Mach number greater than 1 except in compliance with conditions and limitations in an authorization to exceed Mach 1 issued to the operator under appendix B of this part.
(b) In addition, no person may operate a civil aircraft for which the maximum operating limit speed MM0 exceeds a Mach number of 1, to or from an airport in the United States, unless --
(1) Information available to the flight crew includes flight limitations that ensure that flights entering or leaving the United States will not cause a sonic boom to reach the surface within the United States; and
(2) The operator complies with the flight limitations prescribed in paragraph (b)(1) of this section or complies with conditions and limitations in an authorization to exceed Mach 1 issued under appendix B of this part. (Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control number 2120-0005)
For that kind of money (Score:2)
Eye Candy (Score:5, Interesting)
Take a look at a photo of a sonic boom [yahoo.com].
And for the record, the Lameness filter sucks.
Re:Eye Candy (Score:3, Insightful)
I've seen this happen to an F-18 at an air show on a high speed pass by the crowd and it was pretty cool. You saw the cloud of fog flash like a strobe light a couple of times, but it wasn't stable.
Re:Eye Candy (Score:3, Interesting)
You are probably technically correct, but in this case, the photographer took this picture at the exact instant the sonic boom happened:
Through the viewfinder of his camera, Ensign John Gay could see the A/F18 drop from the sky as it headed toward the port side of the Aircraft Carrier Constellation at 1,000 feet. The pilot increases his speed to 750 mph, vapor flickering off the curved surfaces of the plane. At the precise moment of breaking the sound barrier, 200 yards form the carrier, a circular cloud formed arourd the Hornet. With the Pacific Ocean just 75 feet below the aircraft being rippled by the aircraft's pass, Gay hears the explosion of the sonic boom and snaped his camera shutter once. "I clicked the same time I heard the boom and I knew I had it." What he had was a technically meticulous depiction of the sound barrier being broken on July 7, 1999, somewhere on the Pacific between Hawaii and Japan. Sports Illustrated, Brills Content, and Life ran the photo.
The photo recently took first prize in the science and technology division in the World press Photo 2000 contest, which drew more than 42,000 entries worldwide. Because Ensign Gay is a member of the military he was ineligible for the cash prize. "In the last few days, I've been getting calls from everywhere about it again. It's very humbling." Gay, 38, manages a crew of eight assigned to take intelligence photographs from the high-tech belly (TARPS POD) of an F-14 Tomcat. In July, Gay had been part of a Joint Task Force Exercise as the Constellation made its way to Japan.
Gay used his personal Nikon 90 S, set his 80-300 mm zoom lens on 300 mm, his shutter speed at 1/1000 of a second and the aperture at F5.6. "I put it on full manual," Gay said. "I tell young photographers who are into automatic everything, you aren't going to get that shot on auto. The plane is too fast. The camera can't keep up."
At sea level a plane had to exceed 741 mph to break the sound barrier.
The change in pressure as the plane outruns all of the pressure and sound waves in front of it is heard on the ground as an explosion - the sonic
boom. The pressure change condenses the water in the air as the jet passes these waves. Altitude,wind, speed, humidity, the shape and trajectory of the plane - all affect the breaking of the barrier. On July 7 everything was perfect. "You see vapor flicker around the plane. it gets bigger and bigger, then BOOM - it's instantaneous. One second the vapor cloud is there, the next it's gone."
One crash means a supersonic age is impossible? (Score:2, Interesting)
Maybe it's just me, but I recall that the Concorde flew supersonically for years before one of them crashed, and the one that bit the dust was due to metal on the runway, not a major design flaw. When the first automobile crashed, did we mourn the end of the age of the car?
Re:One crash means a supersonic age is impossible? (Score:2)
It wasn't even really the Concorde's problem either. A few years ago I went to an air show on the local base. All around, there were all these propoganda signs warning about the evils of FOD. I asked my Dad what FOD was, and he didn't know. Eventually, we discovered that it's military speak for Foreign Object Damage. The military is very sensitive to the fact that debris such as sticks, nuts and bolts, sheet metal, or seagulls can cause damage to engines. They do everything they can to prevent that from happening.
The Concorde ran over a hunk of metalic debris on the runway which got thrown up by the wheels and punctured the engine. In other words, it got FODed. The "fix" for the Concorde involves wrapping critical components in Kevlar. They really ought to have had a FOD education campaign like the US military.
missed the point (Score:3, Insightful)
This came as a rude shock and completely fucked the economics of concorde which was explicitly designed for long-haul, eg LA-London flights. It's the main reason so few were built.
Morons - what did they expect ? The US will always protect it's own corporations from competition if it can get away with it. This occurs at the expense of it's citizens, but nobody cares about that. Just like any other nation of course, but it's a lot harder to bully the US into accepting competition than smaller countries.
Re:missed the point (Score:2, Interesting)
I was in London at Kew Gardens in 1997, right beneath the "draining toilet bowl" pattern for Heathrow, and a Concorde was coming in. At 10,000 feet, the Concorde was louder than a 747 at 2,000. When the Concorde came in at 2,000, it was so loud you had to put your hands over your ears.
Furthermore, the Concorde *can't* fly from London or Paris to Los Angeles. It burns as much fuel as a 747 just to get to New York, and it carries only 100 people. The plane was a money-loser when it was built, and everybody knew it. It was built purely for the prestige which, arguably, it has in abundance even though it crashed & burned last year.
Re:missed the point (Score:2)
Learn more (Score:3, Informative)
aviationnow [aviationnow.com]
and
savannahmorningnews [savannahmorningnews.com]
Boeing-Su (Score:2)
Rumor at the time was that Boeing and Sukhoi were working with Lear on a supersonic 40 seat corporate jet, and they had 50 confirmed orders.
So this kind of thing is kind of old news.
I'd expect Boeing to ship the Sonic-Crusier cheaper and more flexable than any other corporate type jet, even thought the article mentions Boeing. I'd see the Sonic-Cruiser being the replacement for the 737 and 727 in these circles.
Re:Boeing-Su (Score:2, Interesting)
This is what I've been waiting for. (Score:2, Funny)
Too slow or too big or too cramped or too something or the other.
These new supersonic jets sound like just the ticket.
Wonder how much I can get for my old Plymouth Laser in trade? It needs a new clutch, and the radio is, um, random, but it runs ok if you ignore the oil smake starting out.
Hope they'll give me plenty, because I'll need to keep the monthly payments down.
The hot potato is still getting passed around (Score:2)
I'm not holding my breath for this to become a reality. But I sure hope my old flying instructor who flies Gulfstreams gets a job on one.
Supersonic over water? (Score:2)
Why dawdle at Mach 1 when you can have Mach 3? (Score:4, Interesting)
The maglev train's inventors have posted a proposal for a mach 3 train [maglev2000.com] that would get you coast to coast in an hour and a half. Make the tube ultra straight and you can make the same trip in 45 minutes.
A Swedish engineering firm recently built the world's longest tunnel through hard rock for less than $10 million/mile. If the trans-continental tube came in at around that cost, it'd run $22 Billion. The trains themselves are estimated to cost around $5 million per car - a lot cheaper, and faster, than a $80 Million Gulfstream V.
Re:Why dawdle at Mach 1 when you can have Mach 3? (Score:2)
Interesting concept. First a correction and then a comments.
Airplanes spend most of their power just pushing air out of the way - their drag rises as the cube of their airspeed.
Drag rises as the SQAURE of the speed, not the CUBE. If memory serves me from a course I took in college:
drag = 1/2 * rho * U^2 * S * Cd
where:
rho - density of air
U - speed of the vehicle
S - surface area
Cd - coefficient of drag
I'd be concerned about the construction of such a long, evacuated space (nature abhors a vacuum) as well as the ability to maintain it, protect it from damage (say from an earthquake or a leak - solid rock has fissures) and defend it from terrorists. I'm not saying it's impossible, but rather that there is more to it than it would appear on the surface (umm, well, that's not quite the right word, but you know what I mean! ;^)
Re:Why dawdle at Mach 1 when you can have Mach 3? (Score:2)
I found a single reference [canecreek.com] to power requirements rising by the cube of the speed - perhaps that's what the maglev site's author meant.
Anyone here keeping up with the Big Dig? (Score:2)
Questions: What happens if a large rock is placed on the track by a terrorist group?
Re:Anyone here keeping up with the Big Dig? (Score:2)
This is very true. However, the Big Dig also has the problem of being completely located in a highly populated area with many drivers who are agressive in the extreme. It's also disrupting almost every major artery, both raised and surface, in downtown Boston. And the roads that are still available to drive on are in horrible disrepair.
A low-pressure tunnel from NYC to LA would be primarily built under areas that are not densely populated. Also, if you're just building a single, very straight tunnel, I would think that you could start at one end, drop a subterranean drill in, and work your way along underground, building support structures behind the drill as you go. Your problems there, of course, include: getting through all sorts of materials; clearing anything buried and in the way like cables, wells, etc.; getting permission from everyone; building neccessary above-ground support buildings and connecting them; and keeping the whole thing straight and on the appropriate curvature. No simple feat.
Questions: What happens if a large rock is placed on the track by a terrorist group?
The terrorist "what if" is a factor in just about any endeavor. In this case, yeah, if that happened and the train hit it there would definitely be massive problems including the destruction of the tunnel, probably the destruction of the train, and possibly the destruction of anything above the tunnel. However, I would think that there would be numerous systems to detect and prevent something like this.
Of course you're going to have to have periodic airlocks for maintenance and safety. But those airlocks should be reasonably secured on the outside and wired up so that a thousand alarms go off if someone so much as opens the outside door. But let's say someone manages to get around this and get into an airlock without being detected.
An airlock opening into the tunnel is probably going to cause a very slight, localized pressure change. More sensors and alarms hooked up to something like this. You might even design a slight difference in, as extra security. OK, so somehow you've managed to get around this as well.
The inside of the tunnel would be lined with sensor packs, including cameras, IR detectors, and possibly laser nets. And the wiring and apparatus would be completely within the tunnel, such that you'd have to be inside, or at one end or the other, in order to screw with them. Humans would be watching these, as well as a dedicated computer system running custom image recognition software to detect unexpected changes. OK, somehow you got around this too.
I'd also expect there would be some sort of "sweeper" apparatus, or roving scanners that would constantly patrol up and down the tunnel looking for anything out of the ordinary. You managed to get around this too? Congratulations. It probably would have been a lot easier to pick a convenient spot at surface level, drill down to just above the tunnel, and drop some explosive in there timed to go off when the train passes underneath. Wouldn't take much.
-Todd
Re:Why dawdle at Mach 1 when you can have Mach 3? (Score:2)
I could swear that a few years ago I read about some commercial jet flying across the vast nether <boringmidwest> regions of the United States when, for some fluke reason the plane began a power dive. IIRC, the plane broke the sound barrier!
There was all kinds of consternation and investigation, etc., without much result that I can remember.
I do sympathize with the pilot, though, after guiding those commercial jets in flights that are probably as exciting as watching paint dry!
Warning about private jets (Score:2, Informative)
private jets (including corporate) have one of
the worst accident rates.
MSAirforce One (Score:3, Funny)
Re:MSAirforce One (Score:2)
Harrods?? (Score:2)
If I had one of these... (Score:2)
Take it as a joke.
Re:Concorder (Score:2, Funny)
Oh, stop flattering yourself.
I'm well off. I've got a PhD in Physics and I'm currently a founding member of a semiconductor spin-off firm that's about to make profit for the first time next year.
Yet, I've got no problem when it comes to paying my 30% income tax that's being used to pay for the excellent public health care, public transportation and public services. As a result there's no population living below the poverty line, the unemployment level is 5.7%, literacy out of total population is 100% and I believe this achievement is certainly worth defending! If it means accepting that there will be people who'll abuse the system, so be it. It's the same thing as with the western legal systems where it's preferable that a criminal escapes punishment than an innocent gets punished. To my mind, protecting and helping the less fortunate is a worthwhile goal even if it means that some people will abuse this generosity.
Is it just because my mindset, being a native to a northern European country where the function of the society still is seen as "to take care and protect the weak" instead of "to protect the interests of the wealthy", is so different?
Re:Concorder (Score:2)
Where the heck do you live where the income tax rate is only 30%?
In the US, I (now) pay 35% federal income tax, 13% social security tax (a regressive and partially hidden income tax), and about 8% more in state and local income taxes, for a total of 56% income tax. Yet the US poverty rate is still 13%, and despite universal free education, there is 3% illiteracy.
Re:Here's a picture ... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Bill Gates Flies Coach (Score:2)
Warren Buffet subsequently became a major convert to corporate aviation, later relabeling his jet the "Semi-Defensible" while using it during a particularly vicious takeover battle. In the end, he wound up becoming a customer of a company called Executive Jet, which lets him timeshare his favourite luxury. He subsequently bought the company, so in the end he has managed to make a substantial profit off of his weakness for private aviation. So it went from indulgence to profit center with him, something that I'm sure is pretty typical of the way he operates, and the reason he holds the title of the world's richest investor.
D