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#1
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Just got home from work and my ears are still ringing from standing next to
12 Olympus turbojets at idle thrust as the last three Concordes taxiied into the BA Engineering base and shut down to be towed to the retirement ceremony. This after standing on the 8th floor of the car park watching them come in to land one after the other. An amazing site and such a feeling of being part of history. There are days like this when I love my job! Shawn |
#2
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I just posted, 25 seconds ago, in the Three Concordes thread.
Do give us the (long) version of your Concorde Day viewing - if you find time to type it up at work g. -- Montblack "ShawnD2112" Just got home from work and my ears are still ringing from standing next to 12 Olympus turbojets at idle thrust as the last three Concordes taxiied into the BA Engineering base and shut down to be towed to the retirement ceremony. This after standing on the 8th floor of the car park watching them come in to land one after the other. An amazing site and such a feeling of being part of history. There are days like this when I love my job! |
#3
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Just got home from work and my ears are still ringing from standing next
to 12 Olympus turbojets at idle thrust as the last three Concordes taxiied into the BA Engineering base and shut down to be towed to the retirement ceremony. This after standing on the 8th floor of the car park watching them come in to land one after the other. An amazing site and such a feeling of being part of history. There are days like this when I love my job! Interesting and ironic enthusiasm. In my opinion, it must have felt like attending a wake... :-( Ah, another dream of my misspent youth dashed upon the rocks of reality... Farewell, Concorde! -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#4
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![]() Interesting and ironic enthusiasm. In my opinion, it must have felt like attending a wake... :-( And the Brits say we Americans don't get irony. You're right, Jay, it was an ironic mix of emotions the whole day. No one knew whether to celebrate or mourn. I got nothing of any substance done in the office from the distraction of watching the last departure out the window to watching bits on the news to witnessing the last landings and the final shutdowns in front of the BA hangars. From a purely business perspective, I'm glad to see the thing on the ground finally so it won't continue to drain cash out of the corporate coffers and will no longer fuel petty division within the company (the Concorde Flying Club, as it's always been called). But this airplane was never about business. It was, and still is, about national pride, technological victory, and, much like the space race, doing something simply to prove that it can be done. Though it's older than most other jets are when they retire from commercial service, it was the only one for which everyone would go to the window to watch it take off or land and people would check their watches to see if she got our most important passengers away on time. But the affection the British people have for this aircraft transcends any of those, and it is a mystique I've never fully understood, though I myself have fallen under her spell. It happened in August 01 when I'd only been with BA for a couple of months. I wandered into the hangar one Friday afternoon and it was just me and Concorde alone. OK, it sounds incredibly corny and I don't expect anyone to really understand, but standing under her and looking at her up close, I was smitten. From that perspective, today was an incredibly sad day. I tried to compare it to the feeling people probably have when any aircraft retires from service, be it civilian or military. I'm sure the people who flew and maintained Mustangs mourned when the last one came out of active front line service. The big difference here, though, is that when any other airplane has retired, it's usually been replaced with something that does the same job better. But Concorde's not being replaced by anything. It is the only machine in the world that does what it does. It's not just the end of the Concorde era, it's the end of civilian supersonic travel. That increases the sense of loss, for lack of a better description, for the passing of the era. And on the point someone made about not wanting to be part of this bit of the history, history happens and, if this was going to happen whether I was there or not, I have to say I felt damned privileged to be one of only a couple of hundred people in the world who got to see, hear, and feel what I did today including the new experience of feeling the heat of her engines as one of them maneuvered on the apron and turned her tail toward me. It was good to see her go out on such a high note. Standing on the deck of the building in which I work (a 10 story building with 8 floors of parking garage in the middle), I was able to see the city of London including the London Eye because the sky blessed us with uncharacteristic clarity, and above that skyline I could see the forms of 3 Concordes bearing down on their final touchdowns on Heathrow tarmac, looking exactly like the raptors John described them as. As each one passed by on it's glide to the runway, I made a special point of looking and listening with intent to experience the moment as fully as possible. Given a bit of time I could probably write this up a bit better; this is very much off the cuff tonight, but this largely describes the essence of the afternoon. I could go into detail of the events, but it's not really about that. It's about the bigger meaning, the experience of presence, the emotions involved. I barely even took any pictures as I didn't want to be too distracted by fumbling with a camera. There'll be plenty of photos to go around. I did, however, ring my mate, a lifelong Concorde fan, on the mobile, so he could hear firsthand, the sound of Concorde's last landings at Heathrow. (after all, what good is mobile phone technology if you can't use it to share important events with people important to you?) Being able to share that with a friend made it all the more special. Going to work on Monday, I'll just be working for another airline, not a supersonic airline. I'll never get to see Concorde sitting in the hangar or out on the ramp again. I'll never hear her coming toward my apartment and rush to the back window to watch her execute her departure turn through 180 degrees as she turns away from Heathrow and off toward Bristol and her supersonic acceleration out over the Atlantic. I'll miss those things, but I'm increcibly lucky to have experienced them at all. And, in the scheme of things, this is small stuff. We have aircraft mechanics in our hangar who built her and have only ever worked on her. Imagine the sense of loss they're feeling as their entire working accomplishment in life ceases to be. So I'll leave you with those sentimental thoughts, knowing that, as brother pilots, you'll all understand. Shawn "Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:Jxdmb.18714$Tr4.39348@attbi_s03... Just got home from work and my ears are still ringing from standing next to 12 Olympus turbojets at idle thrust as the last three Concordes taxiied into the BA Engineering base and shut down to be towed to the retirement ceremony. This after standing on the 8th floor of the car park watching them come in to land one after the other. An amazing site and such a feeling of being part of history. There are days like this when I love my job! Interesting and ironic enthusiasm. In my opinion, it must have felt like attending a wake... :-( Ah, another dream of my misspent youth dashed upon the rocks of reality... Farewell, Concorde! -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#5
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![]() ShawnD2112 wrote: I'll never get to see Concorde sitting in the hangar or out on the ramp again. I'll never hear her coming toward my apartment and rush to the back window to watch her execute her departure turn through 180 degrees as she turns away from Heathrow and off toward Bristol and her supersonic acceleration out over the Atlantic. They're making noises about keeping one of them running for exhibitions and shows (I'll bet Oshkosh counts as one of those). It's a real long shot, though. Parts support was expensive enough with the small fleet they had; it'll cost the earth for just one. George Patterson You can dress a hog in a tuxedo, but he still wants to roll in the mud. |
#6
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("G.R. Patterson III" wrote)
They're making noises about keeping one of them running for exhibitions and shows (I'll bet Oshkosh counts as one of those). It's a real long shot, though. Parts support was expensive enough with the small fleet they had; it'll cost the earth for just one. Ever eat boiled people George? Please don't say yes, ....it was a rhetorical question. g -- Montblack |
#7
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![]() Montblack wrote: Ever eat boiled people George? Please don't say yes, Ok. I won't say yes. George Patterson You can dress a hog in a tuxedo, but he still wants to roll in the mud. |
#8
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I think you're right on that one, George. I don't think even a single
flying example is sustainable and, last I heard, all 5 airworthy ones are destined for museum homes. The two non-flyers are due to be gate guards, one at Heathrow, the other somewhere else which escapes me at the moment. Sad but true. Shawn "G.R. Patterson III" wrote in message ... ShawnD2112 wrote: I'll never get to see Concorde sitting in the hangar or out on the ramp again. I'll never hear her coming toward my apartment and rush to the back window to watch her execute her departure turn through 180 degrees as she turns away from Heathrow and off toward Bristol and her supersonic acceleration out over the Atlantic. They're making noises about keeping one of them running for exhibitions and shows (I'll bet Oshkosh counts as one of those). It's a real long shot, though. Parts support was expensive enough with the small fleet they had; it'll cost the earth for just one. George Patterson You can dress a hog in a tuxedo, but he still wants to roll in the mud. |
#9
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Given a bit of time I could probably write this up a bit better
No, Shawn, you have done it well, and done it right. I shed a tear for Concorde, and our youthful dreams. Thanks for sharing your experience. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#10
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Cheers, Jay.
"Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:%ulmb.20964$Fm2.11319@attbi_s04... Given a bit of time I could probably write this up a bit better No, Shawn, you have done it well, and done it right. I shed a tear for Concorde, and our youthful dreams. Thanks for sharing your experience. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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