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Boom Supersonic achieves milestone with XB-1 breaking sound barrier

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Boom Supersonic achieves milestone with XB-1 breaking sound barrier
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Boom XB-1 | Boom

Boom Supersonic has reached a significant milestone in its quest to build the world’s fastest commercial airliner. The company announced that its demonstrator aircraft, known as XB-1, completed its first supersonic flight by breaking the sound barrier over the Mojave Desert in Southern California.

The XB-1 is an experimental airframe and the first supersonic jet built using airliner technology such as carbon fiber composites and digital stability augmentation. The test flight occurred less than a year after the aircraft's initial flight.

Tristan “Geppetto” Brandenburg, Boom's Chief Test Pilot, piloted the XB-1 to an altitude of 34,000 feet before achieving Mach 1.05 (805 miles per hour), breaking the sound barrier for the first time. Brandenburg remarked on the multiple supersonic runs during the test flight: "That was a contingency that we had briefed... It wasn't exactly the plan, but it...was a backup plan."

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The XB-1 has become notable for being independently developed by Boom without military or governmental involvement. It marks a historic achievement as it is now recognized as the first American-made civil jet to break the sound barrier.

Boom's founder and CEO, Blake Scholl, commented on this achievement: “XB-1’s supersonic flight demonstrates that the technology for passenger supersonic flight has arrived... Our ultimate goal is to bring the benefits of supersonic flight to everyone.”

Throughout its development, XB-1 underwent 11 human-piloted test flights to assess its systems under challenging conditions while prioritizing safety. The aircraft's series of tests proved four specific technologies intended for application in Boom's Overture airliner. These include an augmented reality vision system and computational fluid dynamics (CFD) used for simulations.

Brandenburg emphasized his team's efforts: “Our discipline and methodical approach to this flight test program created the safety culture that made a safe and successful first supersonic flight possible.”

Once operational, Overture is expected to travel at speeds up to Mach 1.7 with a capacity of 64-80 passengers across more than 600 global routes. To date, there are 130 orders from major airlines including American Airlines, United Airlines, and Japan Airlines.

Scholl expressed optimism about future developments: "Everybody wants supersonic flight... It's not easy, but it is possible."

Production of Overture will take place at Boom’s facility in Greensboro, North Carolina with plans for entry into service by 2029.

"XB-1 was proof that we can do it," stated Geppetto. "We've proven we can do it... Overture is going to make connections that wouldn't otherwise be possible..."

Boom aims to roll out Overture off production lines within three years with plans for deployment within four years.

Organizations Included in this History
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