American Airlines and Boom Supersonic today announced the airline’s agreement to purchase up to 20 Overture aircraft, with an option for an additional 40. American has paid a non-refundable deposit on the initial 20 aircraft.
Boom Supersonic’s Overture would introduce an important new speed advantage to American’s fleet. Under the terms of the agreement, Boom must meet industry-standard operating, performance and safety requirements as well as American’s other customary conditions before delivery of any Overtures.
“Looking to the future, supersonic travel will be an important part of our ability to deliver for our customers,” said Derek Kerr, American’s Chief Financial Officer. “We are excited about how Boom will shape the future of travel both for our company and our customers.”
In July, Boom revealed the final production design of Overture, which is slated to roll out in 2025 and carry its first passengers by 2029.
Overture is expected to carry passengers at twice the speed of today’s fastest commercial aircraft. It is designed to carry 65 to 80 passengers at Mach 1.7 over water — or twice the speed of today’s fastest commercial aircraft — with a range of 4,250 nautical miles. Flying from Miami to London in just under five hours and Los Angeles to Honolulu in three hours are among the many possibilities.
“We are proud to share our vision of a more connected and sustainable world with American Airlines,” said Blake Scholl, Founder and CEO of Boom. “We believe Overture can help American deepen its competitive advantage on network, loyalty and overall airline preference through the paradigm-changing benefits of cutting travel times in half.”
Boom has yet to specify its engine on the supersonic Overture aircraft.
Move over, @united. @AmericanAir just announced an agreement to purchase up to 20 @boomaero Overture supersonic plane, with options for 40 more. It went out of its way to say it paid a non-refundable deposit on the initial 20. Reminder: This aircraft doesn’t have an engine yet.
• Cruise speed: Mach 1.7 supersonic, Mach 0.94 subsonic • Range: 4,250nm with full payload • Passengers: 65–80 • Exterior Dimensions: Length: 201 feet, Wingspan: 106 feet, Height: 36 feet • Interior Dimensions: 79 feet long, up to 6.5 feet height at aisle • Airframe: composite fuselage, wing, vertical, and horizontal • Wing: gull with digital leading and trailing edge flap control • Flight controls: 4x redundant digital fly-by-wire on 2 LRUs • Powerplant: 4x medium-bypass 100% SAF-compatible turbofan • Airport Community noise: ICAO Chapter 14 / FAA Stage 5
Sam Chui is one of the world's most established aviation and travel blogger, content creator and published author. He enjoys anything related to aviation and travel. His fascination with airplanes stemmed from visiting Kai Tak airport as a teenager. He has spent some of the happiest times of his life in the air.
Wow! I wonder if BA or Virgin will be next
Great article Sam. Thank You!!! I was fortunate enough to fly the AF Concorde with a team of airport terminal designers/builders, etc..Veteran staff from LH, KE & JL….We flew to CDG in 3.5 hours…BUT after arriving 5 Experienced airline industry professional got LOST taking a bus from CDG to an airport hotel just outside the airport….so 3.5hr JFK-CDG PLUS 3.6hr. to go from the terminal to the AIRPORT Hotel! Yeah..we were a little embarrassed
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