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This new supersonic passenger jet will cut travel times by half
By Tech Desk
Published: March 26, 2017
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The XB-1 jet will be capable of flying from London to New York in just three hours and 15 minutes. PHOTO: BOOM SUPERSONIC
A passenger jet capable of flying from London to New York in three hours and 15 minutes may be inching closer to reality.
Boom Supersonic, an aircraft manufacture that aims to bring back supersonic flights to commercial aviation, has successfully raised $33 million in a Series A round which will now allow it to build and fly its first prototype XB-1 aircraft.
PHOTO: BOOM SUPERSONIC
“This funds our first airplane, all the way through flight tests,” said Boom founder and CEO Blake Scholl in an interview with TechCrunch. “Now we have all the pieces we need – technology, suppliers and capital – to go out and make some history and set some speed records.”
Boeing 787-9 is more a fighter jet than a commercial airliner
Boom unveiled the design of the XB-1 Supersonic Demonstrator last November and completed wind tunnel testing on a scaled down physical model earlier this year. The XB-1, or ‘Baby Boom’ will be its first scaled prototype capable of supersonic flight and would pave the way for construction of the company’s first full-size aircraft.
PHOTO: BOOM SUPERSONIC
“We have almost all the engineering completed, and the first wing components are showing up in the office this week,” says Scholl, adding, “We’re about to do structural tests, and then we’re probably about a year away from flight.”
World’s largest aircraft takes rare flight
The aircraft will cost $13 million to build while the rest of the $33 million funding going to the engineering team and development cost.
Investors who have joined in the new round go funding include 8VC, Caffeinated Capital, Palm Drive Ventures, RRE Ventures and YC’s Continuity Fund. Boom’s total funding now stands at $41 million, and also includes investment from Lightbank and Paul Graham.
The company has already announced a partnership with Virgin Galactic and will reveal new customers later this year.
By Tech Desk
Published: March 26, 2017
51SHARES
SHARE TWEET EMAIL
The XB-1 jet will be capable of flying from London to New York in just three hours and 15 minutes. PHOTO: BOOM SUPERSONIC
A passenger jet capable of flying from London to New York in three hours and 15 minutes may be inching closer to reality.
Boom Supersonic, an aircraft manufacture that aims to bring back supersonic flights to commercial aviation, has successfully raised $33 million in a Series A round which will now allow it to build and fly its first prototype XB-1 aircraft.
PHOTO: BOOM SUPERSONIC
“This funds our first airplane, all the way through flight tests,” said Boom founder and CEO Blake Scholl in an interview with TechCrunch. “Now we have all the pieces we need – technology, suppliers and capital – to go out and make some history and set some speed records.”
Boeing 787-9 is more a fighter jet than a commercial airliner
Boom unveiled the design of the XB-1 Supersonic Demonstrator last November and completed wind tunnel testing on a scaled down physical model earlier this year. The XB-1, or ‘Baby Boom’ will be its first scaled prototype capable of supersonic flight and would pave the way for construction of the company’s first full-size aircraft.
PHOTO: BOOM SUPERSONIC
“We have almost all the engineering completed, and the first wing components are showing up in the office this week,” says Scholl, adding, “We’re about to do structural tests, and then we’re probably about a year away from flight.”
World’s largest aircraft takes rare flight
The aircraft will cost $13 million to build while the rest of the $33 million funding going to the engineering team and development cost.
Investors who have joined in the new round go funding include 8VC, Caffeinated Capital, Palm Drive Ventures, RRE Ventures and YC’s Continuity Fund. Boom’s total funding now stands at $41 million, and also includes investment from Lightbank and Paul Graham.
The company has already announced a partnership with Virgin Galactic and will reveal new customers later this year.