1973: Concorde slashes Atlantic flight time

Concorde has made its first non-stop crossing of the Atlantic in record-breaking time.

The French model of the supersonic airliner flew from the US capital, Washington, to Orly airport in Paris in three hours 32 minutes.

The pilots, Jean Franchi and Gilbert Defer, cut the previous record for a transatlantic airliner journey in half, flying the plane at an average speed of 954 mph (1,535 kph).

Officials for Aerospatiale - the French company involved in the project - said the plane touched down at 1617 local time (1517 GMT), 13 minutes ahead of schedule.

This second pre-production model of the aircraft being co-built with the British Aircraft Corporation was also carrying a small number of passengers.

Great success

Concorde has been on a lengthy tour of North and South America to promote it to reluctant airlines that have so far said they have no need for a plane that can travel at twice the speed of sound.

The trip was also designed to convince aviation authorities in the two continents to fit the supersonic jets into subsonic traffic patterns when the companies begin commercial flights in 1975.

BAC vice-chairman Geoffrey Knight said the tour had been a great success and prospects for the future were good.