btscott wrote on Jul 7
th, 2011 at 1:28pm:
I was the guest of BA on the Concorde in the early 80s and flew it from IAD to LHR on a Halloween night.
Wasn't a cheap experience I guess. With that passenger load, for both sides.

Regarding Braniff, I don't know why they did that. I own more than one book about that period and if there is a main tenor, it states that they wanted to gain operating experience on the ship. Well, they did and their crews got trained on it, but trying a commercial service in the most cost ineffective regime of the lady (which is everything below M1.4) while other companies are running the equally or larger sized low-cost birds is sort of insane.
Do that over a year (which they did) and your bank won't be happy about it.
You are limited to M0.95 over land, so you may be somehow faster when it comes to distance, but those short routes and all the departure/arrival stuff included render the time reduction close to nil, while the fuel flows like dumped there.
High ticket prices, same time to travel as the slow-mos and the wow effect of Concorde as the only attraction don't make good business, as proven there.
But just another chapter of the operation history, involving numerous reasons, background stories and facts.
Peter mentions Singapore Airlines. They even ran a half livery on the corresponding birds, so BA/SA was visible. I wouldn't call it beautiful, but unique.

They also went supersonic first, until some regulations took over a part of the planned route.
Ah, so many stories about regulations alone to tell. Big ol' money/political business aviation is.
By the way, there's a reason why every modern SST model aims to go for 90.000+ft and that reason isn't just about speed.
If those planes ever happen? There's a big gap to fill since Concorde services ended in my eyes, so I'm hoping/wishing of course, as a fan, regardless of the airline itself.

Me is sorry to go a bit off topic though, the thread was about the
Braniff 707 of course. I just came across that name since a story is attached to it.