The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Boom trying to sell supersonic to airlines

Per-seat cost and fuel efficiency some of challenges ahead.

- By Justin Bachman Washington Post

Ask a harried air traveler about the basics of modern flight, and you’ll probably elicit surprise when they discover commercial airplanes fly only as fast as they did in the 1950s. Given the range of aerospace advances in the past half-century, plus the technologi­cal leaps in almost every other area of human endeavor, it seems reasonable to ask: Why can’t we fly faster?

That’s the question driving a startup called Boom Technology, which says it’s time to bring supersonic jet travel into the mainstream-in a modern way. The company is pursuing speed with an audacious idea: a 45-seat aircraft that cruises at Mach 2.2 (1,451 mph), faster than the defunct Concorde and certainly faster than the standard 550 mph, with fares no more expensive than a current business-class round trip, which ranges between $5,000 and $10,000.

Yet long before travelers can marvel at a quick hop across the Atlantic, Boom will need to sell the airlines not just on a technicall­y disruptive aircraft, but also on one that can accomplish such feats of velocity cost-effectivel­y. It must earn a solid profit — no middling returns allowed — and this, of course, has been a key reason the Concorde was an aberration rather than the harbinger of universal supersonic travel.

Boom is likely to encounter deep skepticism in a conservati­ve industry that still relies heavily on a fundamenta­l airplane design devised 70 years ago. The major global airlines Boom will court operate with two cardinal maxims: It’s really hard to make money with small airplanes, and it’s really, really hard to make money with supersonic airplanes, which are renowned for their fuel inefficien­cy.

“I have no problem seeing the demand for this airplane,” says Marty St. George, a Jet-Blue Airways Corp. executive and industry veteran. “The issue is can you do it and make the numbers work?”

Boom will face a numerical gauntlet as it seeks to sell airlines on the advantages of a small, supersonic craft, with airlines posing tough questions about weight, range, fuel burn, maintenanc­e, dispatch reliabilit­y and dozens of other issues. The company also plans for its aircraft to fly on three engines, a departure from the industry trend of using two engines as the most efficient configurat­ion.

In response to skeptics, Boom touts its design as a radical update of the troubled Concorde, which was operated by only two airlines over 27 years. Airlines no longer abide such loud, kerosene-gulping equipment, which means new engine designs must be fuel-efficient and coupled with meager emissions and low noise.

Boom has diagnosed Concorde’s operating flaws as twofold. First, the plane had ferociousl­y high operating costs, driven primarily by its voracious appetite for jet fuel. “Grossly uneconomic,” in the words of a 1978 New York Times article summarizin­g critiques of the aircraft. Second, the Concorde’s load factors were generally lean because of the steep fares Air France and British Airways were forced to charge, typically around $15,000 to $20,000 in current dollars.

Boom says it plans to address all of these shortcomin­gs. The startup’s signature city pairing is New York to London, which would take a little more than three hours to fly and give a corporate traveler the opportunit­y to make a day trip across the pond and back.

“Leave New York at 6 a.m., make afternoon and dinner meetings in London, and be home to tuck your kids into bed,” the suburban Denver-based company says on its website.

“It’s about making the economics work and then delivering the aircraft we say we can deliver,” says Boom’s co-founder and chief executive officer, Blake Scholl, a pilot and ex-app developer.

Boom has struck a deal with the Spaceship Co., the manufactur­ing division of Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic, to use that company’s engineerin­g, design, and flight-test support services. The Spaceship Co. also has options for Boom’s first 10 aircraft as part of the arrangemen­t.

“Richard has long expressed interest in developing high speed flight and building high speed flight R&D through Virgin Galactic and our manufactur­ing organizati­on,” Virgin Group spokeswoma­n Christine Choi said in an email. “It is still early days and just the start of what you’ll hear about our shared ambitions and efforts.”

Another unidentifi­ed European airline has taken options for 15 aircraft, Scholl says, and Boom is talking to carriers about options for an additional 170 aircraft. An analysis by Boyd Group Internatio­nal, an aviation consulting firm, suggested that Boom could sell 1,300 supersonic passenger jets over 10 years for a premium service on routes frequented by corporate traffic.

Boom’s aircraft would target such global business centers as Hong Kong, London, New York, Singapore, Sydney, and Tokyo, where corporate travelers would likely pay for the time savings a supersonic jet could afford.

Boom won’t disclose a delivery date publicly but says it expects its first airplane to be ready in “the early 2020s.”

One potential tool to attract buyers will be the prospect of penalty payments, which are widely used by manufactur­ers to compensate customers if engines or aircraft fall short of guarantees.

“If [airlines] were guaranteed the numbers, someone will try it,” says Jet Blue’s St. George.

“With the operationa­l costs they are expecting for this airplane ... current business-class fares could make this airplane profitable,” says consultant Michael Boyd. “It passed the smell test on this end. This wasn’t like a group of Star Trek geeks.”

The company will be forced to demonstrat­e that whatever positive performanc­e data its models yield in computer simulation­s, the planes will hold up in the real and very brutal world of airline economics. That will require extensive flight testing so that Boom can move beyond the “paper airplane” stage, according to St. George.

Boom plans to fly a onethird-size demonstrat­or version of its airplane called the XB-1 late next year, working with General Electric Co. It’s aiming to initially fly GE’s J85 engines, a model that dates to the 1950s, on the XB-1. Flights will begin at subsonic speeds and then get progressiv­ely faster.

The biggest technical challenge, however, will probably be the engine, as noted in a recent analysis by Bjorn Fehrm, an aerospace consultant and a former fighter pilot in the Swedish air force. Fehrm estimated that the Boom design is likely to use about three times the amount of fuel per seat-mile than current flights between London and New York.

“Would some [airlines] buy some as flagship aircraft for high-yield routes?” asks Richard Aboulafia, an aerospace consultant at Teal Group. “L.A.-Tokyo, New York-London? Sure, I imagine they would. But, again, it comes down to seat mile costs, and until we see anything resembling engine specificat­ions, you can’t even begin to guess at that.”

 ?? PETER FOLEY / BLOOMBERG ?? The Concorde takes off at sunrise from John F. Kennedy Internatio­nal Airport in New York on its last flight on Oct. 24, 2003, ending the supersonic era for all but military pilots. The company Boom is working to try and bring supersonic flight back to...
PETER FOLEY / BLOOMBERG The Concorde takes off at sunrise from John F. Kennedy Internatio­nal Airport in New York on its last flight on Oct. 24, 2003, ending the supersonic era for all but military pilots. The company Boom is working to try and bring supersonic flight back to...

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