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  • It would've flown nearly three times the speed of sound and carry more than 250 passengers

  • the distance from New York to Los Angeles in under two hours.

  • Its development was backed by a billion in U.S. government funding and

  • an army of Boeing engineers.

  • And airlines were lining up to buy it.

  • This, would've been America's answer to Concorde.

  • The 1960's was a decade marked by relentless optimism for the future.

  • Laser beams, satellites, and moon landings.

  • This was a decade in which the world was changing quickly.

  • In just a few short years, propeller driven aircraft had been replaced by sleek new jetliners.

  • And while this new jet age was exciting, many were expecting an even bigger leap forward.

  • Air travel, was about to get a whole lot faster.

  • A 1950's propeller driven airliner could take 15 hours to fly from New York to London.

  • In the 1960's, a jet made that same flight in around seven hours.

  • But many were expecting that by the 1970's, supersonic transports would begin

  • replacing jets.

  • And they would fly two or even three times the speed of jetliners.

  • And that would cut a New York to London flight down to under three hours.

  • By the end of the 1970's, hundreds of these supersonic transports were expected

  • to be flying.

  • And nearly every major American aircraft manufacturer was dreaming up plans for them.

  • But these were still very much, just plans.

  • Because actually building a supersonic transport was an enormous challenge.

  • The technological hurdles alone, were daunting.

  • But supersonic transports wouldn't just need to fly fast, they'd need to be economical

  • enough for airlines to actually operate.

  • And these same airlines were already buying American made jetliners.

  • U.S. manufacturers had the commercial aviation market, pretty much cornered.

  • So there wasn't the will to invest the massive sums of money needed to get any of these plans

  • off the ground.

  • But across the Atlantic, the British and French weren't waiting around.

  • In 1962, the two countries announced a partnership to build Concorde, and this marked the first

  • serious effort to actually build a supersonic airliner.

  • And a few months later, the Soviets also jumped into the race with their Tupolev 144.

  • The Americans had been keeping an eye on the Concorde program well before 1962.

  • Over the years, they watched the program transform from a concept to a serious enterprise.

  • And that began to worry American officials.

  • Because if the British and French would be the first to open up the supersonic transport

  • market, and do so uncontested, well, that could seriously threaten America's lead

  • in civil Aviation.

  • Thousands of aerospace jobs could be at stake.

  • A future American President might one day be forced to fly around in a foreign built

  • supersonic transport.

  • And airlines, were now also beginning to show interest.

  • Pan American World Airways, at the time the largest American international carrier, even

  • announced its intention to buy Concordes.

  • So in 1963, the race was on.

  • President Kennedy announced that the U.S. government would help fund the development

  • of an American supersonic transport.

  • Manufacturers were invited to participate in a design competition which outlined an

  • ambitious set of goals.

  • Develop an aircraft considerably faster and larger than Concorde, with economics comparable

  • to regular subsonic jets.

  • Just as ambitious were the design proposals from the three participating American manufacturers.

  • But after years of evaluation, it was Boeing's design that was ultimately chosen in 1967.

  • And this was Boeing's design entry, the 2707.

  • It would fly considerably faster than Concorde, and that introduced a whole slew of technical

  • challenges requiring some pretty radical solutions.

  • Like all supersonic transports, the Boeing 2707's shape was highly streamlined.

  • But it also featured something unheard for a plane it's size.

  • A variable geometry wing.

  • During landing and takeoff, the 2707's wings would be pivoted forward to allow for lower

  • flight speeds and increased control.

  • During supersonic cruise, its wings would be swept back to counter the massive aerodynamic

  • drag it would experience as it approached three times the speed of sound.

  • The 2707 would be powered by four Turbojets fitted with afterburners.

  • To counter the heat they generated, they were uniquely positioned under the aircraft at

  • the rear.

  • But this this made the plane rear heavy.

  • And that meant the 2707 needed an extra set of landing gear.

  • Because it would cruise considerably faster than Concorde, atmospheric friction would

  • heat the 2707's exterior to several hundred degrees Fahrenheit.

  • Temperatures hot enough to soften regular aircraft aluminum.

  • So Boeing would need to build the fuselage out of titanium, with components and systems

  • all specially designed to withstand the enormous heat.

  • And it would fly much higher than a typical jet, which meant more pressurization.

  • Hence the tiny cabin windows which were only six inches.

  • Luckily for passengers, the 2707 would feature an advanced in-flight entertainment system

  • with a cabin full of televisions.

  • Boeing was confident that the 2707 could enter service with airlines, by the mid-1970's.

  • But this plane was pushing 1960's technology way beyond its limits.

  • It wasn't even close to being ready.

  • To start, the titanium alloy needed for the 2707's airframe was expensive and difficult

  • to work with.

  • The swing-wing mechanism was complex and enormously heavy.

  • It wasn't going to work, and eventually, Boeing was forced back to the drawing board, designing

  • a plane with a more conventional delta wing, like Concorde.

  • But even as Boeing struggled to work through massive engineering hurdles, there was an

  • even bigger problem.

  • At supersonic speeds, aircraft generate loud sonic booms that can be heard along the entire

  • supersonic flight path.

  • A Boeing 2707 cruising at 60 thousand feet would produce a sonic boom heard as much as

  • 30 miles away.

  • It was estimated that a single transcontinental flight would produce sonic booms heard by

  • over 5 million people.

  • And to see just how tolerant people were, in 1964, the good people of Oklahoma City

  • were to subjected six months of daily sonic boom testing by the FAA and Air Force.

  • With supersonic jets regularly flying overhead, booms cracked windows on two of the city's

  • tallest buildings.

  • The tests were forced to end early.

  • More than 15 thousand residents filed complaints and a further 5 thousand made claims

  • for property damage.

  • A full quarter of the city's residents claimed they couldn't tolerate living with the noise.

  • The Oklahoma boom tests happened only months after America's Supersonic effort was announced.

  • But it was one of many warning signs that officials seemed unwilling to acknowledge.

  • Practical realities were put on hold, because the competitiveness of America's aviation

  • industry and national pride remained at stake.

  • But as the 1960s wore on, the program was plagued by technical setbacks.

  • The ambitious program requirements were not being met, and an anti-SST movement had grown

  • from a handful of concerned citizens to a major national coalition of

  • environmental organizations.

  • Growing public opposition to sonic booms had spread to other kinds of other fears.

  • Some worried that hundreds of supersonic airliners flying at high altitude would emit enough

  • nitrogen oxide to destroy the ozone layer.

  • They painted a picture of a dystopian future, where exhaust gases and water vapor would

  • cover the earth in a permanent haze.

  • In 1969, Nixon took over the presidency.

  • By this point America's Supersonic Transport Program was delayed by years, its budget ballooning

  • out of control, and the public's enthusiasm wavering.

  • Two comprehensive reviews commissioned by the government questioned the future viability

  • of supersonic transports, and recommended ending public funding for the program.

  • So now, it was on President Nixon' shoulders to make the difficult decision.

  • For fifty years, the United States has lead the world in air transport.

  • The decision that we announce today means that we will continue maintain leadership

  • in this field.

  • The supersonic transport is going to be built.

  • But by this point, many could see that the Boeing 2707's days were clearly numbered.

  • With a worsening economic situation in the United States, the program was quickly becoming

  • a contentious political issue.

  • In 1971 the U.S Senate rejected any further funding for the project and the Boeing 2707

  • officially died.

  • Two years later, the FAA banned all civil supersonic aviation over the United States

  • due to sonic boom noise concerns, greatly impacting the sales potential of the Concorde,

  • and the viability of any future supersonic transport.

  • During the 1960's many had predicted that hundreds of SSTs would fly the skies within

  • the coming decades.

  • While the Concorde flew many years, only 14 were ever delivered to just two airlines.

  • The Soviet Union's TU-144 only flew regular passenger service for 8 months

  • on a single route.

  • When the 2707 project was canceled, the threat of foreign competition and concerns about

  • national prestige were no longer great enough to offset political, economic and

  • environmental pressures.

  • The public's view of government programs and optimism over technology had waned.

  • Over the course of the 1960's the world had clearly changed.

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It would've flown nearly three times the speed of sound and carry more than 250 passengers

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