With all the work put into making jets more fuel efficient, I'm sure supersonic jets would also benefit.
I wonder what the fuel economy of an F-22 at supercruise is, and if that would be a good baseline for a supersonic liner. I'm not asking for much, maybe just mach 1 or 2. At least for now.
Sure, a new SST would be more fuel-efficient than Concorde, but it would still be much more expensive than standard subsonic commercial air. Even people who could afford it often didn't find the couple saved hours worth the Concorde premium over the standard first class fare, and if anything that market (rich people) is even softer today because of the rise of the long-range private jet.
Remember, Concorde was developed with public money, billions that the British and French taxpayers never got back. That will not happen again. A future SST developed by Boeing or Airbus would be so expensive it would literally be gambling the entire corporation, which, without airline market demand, also will not happen. The near-Mach 1, 250 pax Boeing Sonic Cruiser proposal in the '90s attracted about zero airline interest.
Yes that's correct, and it was just the one sortie at that but a phenomenal achievement all the same.
Indeed. Considering that the Vulcan's original
raison d'etre was to deliver "cans of instant sunshine," I'm OK with it almost-never having been used in anger. Likewise the B-36 and B-47 (as a bomber, the reconnaissance variants did see action).