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Supersonic passenger planes may begin testing next year

By Hugo Martin, Los Angeles Times
Published: December 5, 2016, 5:55pm

The time it takes to fly from New York to London may be cut by more than half if Virgin Group founder Richard Branson and a Denver startup create a new supersonic passenger plane.

The manufacturing team for Branson’s Virgin Galactic company is working with Boom Supersonic to test a prototype next year of a passenger plane that could fly at more than twice the speed of a typical commercial jet.

Supersonic passenger flights stopped after the crash of an Air France Concorde in 2000 outside Paris that killed 113 people, and the downturn in the industry after 9/11.

Blake Scholl, chief executive of Boom, said safety was not the reason the jets were grounded. He said the planes were too expensive to operate.

“Today, we are sitting on 50 years of progress on aerodynamics, fuel economy, design,” he said.

Instead of spending seven hours and paying up to $5,500 for a flight from New York to London on a Boeing 747, travelers can spend about $2,500 for a three-hour flight to cross the Atlantic on a supersonic jet, according to Boom.

“Supersonic travel for both cargo and humans will result in many exciting benefits,” Branson said in a video statement. Under the partnership, Branson is expected to fly the Boom jets in his Virgin Atlantic and Virgin Australia airlines.

A survey of more than 2,000 travel boards and tourism groups taken last month found that 63 percent of senior travel executives expect supersonic flying to become a mainstream form of commercial transportation.

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