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Concorde bound for German aviation Museum
( 2003-06-25 15:08) (Agencies)

With final roars from four engines, an Air France Concorde completed its farewell flight ahead of a journey where none of the supersonic jets has ever gone before - to a German museum, where it will stand next to its former rival, the Soviet-made Tupolev 144.

Air France's Concorde, F-BVFB, lands at Baden-Baden Airport near Karlsruhe, southern Germany, Tuesday, June 24, 2003, after leaving Paris' Charles de Galle Airport. [AP]

Thousands of onlookers cheered, clapped and shouted "Bravo" as Concorde F-BVFB touched down at Karlsruhe-Baden-Baden airport in southwestern Germany just after noon Tuesday, the last of nearly 5,500 flights since the plane began service on April 8, 1976.

After departing Paris' Charles de Gaulle airport, the plane broke the sound barrier one last time on a loop over the Atlantic before heading southeast to Germany with about 40 passengers, many of them Air France employees.

"I felt very sad," pilot Jean-Louis Chatelain told reporters after leaving the cockpit. "It was very emotional to have flown my last flight with Concorde."

Mechanics at Baden-Baden will remove the Concorde's wing tips, nose, tail and tail cone to prepare it for a trip down the Rhine River to the Sinsheim Auto & Technik Museum - a privately funded fantasy world of modern technology ranging from an original Corvette and a 1952 Oldsmobile "Rocket" to steam engines, World War II-era fighter planes and a jumbo jet.

The F-BVFB will take up residence beside the Tu-144, known in the West as the "Concordski," in what the museum boasts it will be the only place where both jets will be on show side by side.

Unlike the Concorde, which Air France flew for 27 years before retiring its fleet of five supersonic luxury jets last month, the Tu-144 flew for less than 10 years before being retired in 1978.

The mood on Tuesday's flight was relaxed, with passengers roaming freely and swapping Concorde stories, said Nadine Grouspas, an Air France customer representative who was on board.

"It was great," she said. "We saw as we flew in how many people had gathered to meet us, and it was a very moving experience."

Air France said it donated the jet to the museum for a symbolic $1.15 in tribute to 75 Germans who lost their lives aboard the Concorde that crashed on July 25, 2000 after takeoff from Charles de Gaulle.

The crash, which killed 113 people, led to a 13-month suspension of all Concorde travel. Flights resumed after safety checks, but the plane never recovered and ultimately fell victim to the demise in luxury air travel. British Airways, the only other company to fly Concorde, is stopping supersonic service in October.

One Air France Concorde has already gone to the U.S. Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum, in Washington. Another landed during last week's Paris Air Show at Le Bourget for permanent display at the French Air and Space Museum.

An aeronautics exhibit park in Toulouse, France, near where the aircraft was originally built, will host another. The fifth will stay on display at Charles de Gaulle.

F-BVFB, which made its last flight Tuesday, flew around the world between Sept. 1-21, 1988, covering 29,561 miles in 38 hours and 13 minutes. In total, the plane had clocked 14,771 flying hours over 5,473 flights.

 
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