back to article Want to own a bit of Concorde? Got £750k burning a hole in your pocket? We have just the thing

News has reached Vulture Central of an opportunity to purchase an actual, honest-to-goodness Concorde engine, replete with afterburner. We're big fans of the retired supersonic airliner here at El Reg. It was first put into operation in 1976 and the Anglo-French effort but was eventually retired in 2003 and pensioned off to …

  1. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    LA Science museum

    ...Has a rather high mileage re-usable spacecraft parked in it. The purchase order for it explicitly says it is not to be flown again.

    1. MyffyW Silver badge

      Re: LA Science museum

      Given the toll in human lives from it's lost sister ships, that is a sound enough injunction.

      1. tfewster
        Facepalm

        Re: LA Science museum

        At around 240 deaths per 10 billion vehicle-miles, it's almost twice as dangerous as driving!

        A 1.5% chance of death on each mission!

        I'd take those odds.

        1. Persona Silver badge

          Re: LA Science museum

          Statistics!

          Over 3.9% of all the people who flew on a shuttle died in in a shuttle accident.

          Alternatively you could say that 40% of the space shuttles failed with a total loss of crew.

    2. mad_dr
      Thumb Up

      Re: LA Science museum

      The look on the face of my three-year old and the fact that it was the first time he'd been stunned into silence in his life was, alone, worth the price of admission. We're going back later this month.

      1. werdsmith Silver badge

        Re: LA Science museum

        Atlantis at Kennedy Visitor Center on the Florida coast is also a very nice display, nicely lit and almost close enough to touch.

        I'

        1. JDC

          Re: LA Science museum

          Also the Enterprise on the Intrepid in New York - granted it never made it into space, but it's still an amazing piece of engineering, and of course the rest of the museum is well worth seeing too.

      2. CrazyOldCatMan Silver badge

        Re: LA Science museum

        The look on the face of my three-year old

        I remember when the first shuttle went up in 1982 (I was 17) - our maths teacher had organised a TV and arranged for us to all cram into her classroom to watch the launch live.

        To say that we were impressed is an understatement. I think we all had visions of moving to space stations/the moon in our 20's.

  2. Chris G

    Light the fire

    If the Reg wants to start an an El Reg Olympus powered Vulture crowdfunder I'm in wth a few quid.

    We would need a hell of a lot of paper for the fuselage though.

    1. My-Handle

      Re: Light the fire

      Same here. My granddad (still alive and kicking at 93 years old) was one of the engineers who worked on the Concorde project during his time at the Bristol Aeroplane Company. Would love to put something towards keeping it's legacy alive.

      1. GlenP Silver badge

        Re: Light the fire

        My Dad worked at Bristol then Rolls Royce Aero but I don't think he worked on these engines at all. His claim to fame was doing a lot of the first-off inspection on components for the prototype RB211 including the turbine blades. Apparently they had no way of actually measuring these, it was more a case of checking the correct machining settings had been used.

        1. StargateSg7

          Re: Light the fire

          ---

          Hmmmm .... So if I buy it, disassemble it and scan everything into the CAD/CAM computer via a 3D-XYZ high resolution laser scanner that goes to sub-micron-levels of accuracy, I could do some finite element analysis (FEA) on the all the parts including the turbine/compressor blades, some aerodynamic flow simulations and some final modifications and engine design improvements AND THEN I could then 3D-Print and/or CNC-machine out all-new-titanium parts and fitting to make that engine TWICE or even THREE TIMES as powerful than before AND CLEANER BURNING!

          750 000 pounds you say? That's about $1 200 000 CAN ..... Hmmm... we just might be able to swing that from our Incidental Projects Fund ! I'll ask the heads on Monday to see if they want to bid on it!

          .

          1. bigphil9009

            Re: Light the fire

            But in a world where you have a gravatonic cavity wave FTL engine, why would you possibly need an archaic fuel-burning jet engine?

            That is, unless you didn't actually have said gravatonic cavity wave FTL engine... perish the thought!

      2. Aussie Doc
        Pint

        Re: Light the fire

        Good on dad.

        Shout him one for me ---->

      3. Nick Ryan Silver badge

        Re: Light the fire

        My uncle, no longer alive, apparently designed the computer systems that ran it all that allowed concorde to go supersonic.

        The things one finds out about rather too late...

    2. Peter2 Silver badge

      Re: Light the fire

      Screw paper. Who here made gocarts out of scrap in their childhood before computer games came along and robbed youth or time misspent doing things you probably shouldn't have been doing?

      All that's needed is some basic gocart style steering to add to that cart and that'd make an epic gocart if attached to fuel, oil and the requisite starting and throttle bits to light it off. It'd be interesting to see how long it took to get back to the office by road. Or um, by the direct route through every intervening obstacle.

      1. Jellied Eel Silver badge

        Re: Light the fire

        Negative Ghostrider, the pattern is full..

        Never mind go-karts, methinks it'd be a perfect engine swap for a Tesla Semi. LS swapping? Pfft.. this has a turbo and an afterburner. And the donner vehicle would.. or should have enough battery to fire the thing up.

        1. Tom 7

          Re: Light the fire

          Donner vehicle wont got very fast with me clinging on ordering a big one!

          1. Jellied Eel Silver badge

            Re: Light the fire

            Donner vehicle wont got very fast with me clinging on ordering a big one!

            Donner vehicle seemed apt given Tesla semis, buying jet engines off ebay* and kebabs are all ideas that seem better when drunk.

            But a jet truck or car has some advantages, like discouraging tail gating. Or with the addition of a generator, become a handy mobile, rapid response roadside supercharger. A jet engine in a static config would also help power truck stop charging.

            *which reminds me, there was/is a fun site called Dovebid that auctioned off all sorts of fun looking kit.

        2. Jimmy2Cows Silver badge
          Flame

          Re: donner vehicle

          For anyone who always wondered where those "elephant's leg" giant skewered lumps of kebab meat came from... the mystery is at last solved!!

          [ I like my kebab meat well done -------------------------> ]

      2. Tom 7

        Re: Light the fire

        When we were kids you could make go-cart from scrap. You could go to a hardware store and buy the bits to make a go-cart too. Recently i was trying to make something using some of my experience in go-cart building and discovered the only way to buy the bits to make a go-cart was to actually buy a go-cart.

        Given one of the uses was to mount a Ram Jet kickstarted by a small motorbike engine on it I have looked into alternatives. And lego can fuck off - somewhere in out family is an old style box of lego you can make anything (non-thermal) with but now a kit makes one thing and one thing only. Largely because you cant afford anything else!

        1. Antron Argaiv Silver badge
          Alert

          Re: Light the fire

          We called them "billy carts" and the wheels were round ball bearings from autos, pounded onto the trimmed ends of 2x4s. Two short 2x4s with bearings on for the axles, the front had a hole drilled and a long one for the chassis. Bolt through the hole onto the chassis and nail the rear one on the other end. Seat in the middle and a string through the front axle for steering. And a couple of friends to push, of course. Worked best on blacktop play areas.

          Scraped elbows and knees were to be expected.

          With a jet engine, though, you might want to skip the bearings and use buggy wheels. And maybe add more seating :-)

          1. Laura Kerr

            Re: Light the fire

            They were called guiders round these parts, and old pram wheels with solid rubber tyres were de rigeur. No brakes of course, but who needs a straight nose and their front teeth anyway.

            1. werdsmith Silver badge

              Re: Light the fire

              A plank with a rear axle from a pram which was held to the plank with simple wood staples.

              The front axle was a cross-plank with a pram axle stapled in a similar way. This cross plank was pivot by a single loose bolt through the main plank. Steering was a piece of rope at either end of the cross front axle. Brake was a pivot lever made of wood that rubbed against he solid rear tyre, and would make smoke and a stinky rubber smell on a downhill.

              1. jake Silver badge

                Re: Light the fire

                Add a couple pulleys (one an idler on a pivot for speed control, kinda) and a horizontal shaft Briggs and you really had something back in the early '60s ... A vertical shaft engine (typical lawnmower) could used too, with a little more engineering.

                And yes, a quick perusal of the local hardware store shows all of the necessary bits are still on the shelf. (A new 6.5HP HS engine from Harbor Freight is cheap at $120, if you can't find a used one at a garage sale.) Sadly, however, kids aren't allowed to do anything fun anymore. Gawd/ess forbid that they might possibly bruise themselves. Poor little bastards.

              2. Aussie Doc
                Black Helicopters

                Re: Light the fire

                A brake, you say.

                I see why my childhood may have been a tad more exciting than I realised.

                Coz we used to fly down the dirt hill like one of these ---->

                1. Antron Argaiv Silver badge

                  Re: Light the fire

                  Yes, the really fancy ones did have brakes.

                  A short piece of wood, nailed to the side of the main chassis, close to hand. It pivoted on the nail (you want to use a thick, long one, because the nail pulling out would be unfortunate) and when you pulled up on one end, the other end dragged on the ground.

                  Not sure why ball bearings were used instead of buggy wheels, but they worked well, until the school forbade their use on the tennis courts. Apparently, they were leaving ruts in the surface...

                  1. CrazyOldCatMan Silver badge

                    Re: Light the fire

                    and when you pulled up on one end, the other end dragged on the ground

                    One of my friends made one like this except for the pivot rubbing against the back wheel rather than the ground.

                    Made for some... interesting[1] handling when applied.

                    [1] "Interesting" == "new underpants please".

              3. Peter2 Silver badge

                Re: Light the fire

                This sounds like almost exactly the design I did on mine, except that my steering was pretty gucci; I made mine from a pram and attached the pram handles to each end of the cross axle, which came to about the right place for the steering to sit on your lap and be pushed from side to side.

                Cornering wasn't great, and by brakes were wooden pivot levers that pushed the parking breaks on the pram into position. This had two serious problems. Firstly, while probably a bit better than yours, the brakes were crap and were only used in emergencies or on very shallow hills. Secondly, if single crewed on the gocart you you could only activate them by letting go of the steering.

                We didn't dare use it on any serious hills, and never exceeded something like 20mph. Even at that young age, we took one look at the more serious hills available and went "uh, no". We never needed somebody to tell us not to do something very stupid, we just learned from the cuts and scrapes doing mildly stupid things and acquired the requisite sense of caution.

                Now, imagine attaching a concorde engine to the back? :D

                And um, yes. I'll let somebody else fly drive it.

            2. Aussie Doc
              Pint

              Re: Light the fire

              You 'ad tyres on your pram wheels?

              Looxury.

          2. Aussie Doc
            Mushroom

            Re: Light the fire

            "And maybe add more seating :-) "

            Plus somebody at the front instructing passengers how to put on a parachute in case of problems.

        2. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: Light the fire

          I am surprised because these days hardware stores sell a variety of bits of metal and wheels, and that and the other stuff you can easily buy on eBay.

          Also, if you want to go whole hog, these days it's cheap to buy some epoxy and carbon fibre, make a simple mould out of papier-maché, and make a high tech body more easily than you could fabricate it out of wood.

          1. Peter2 Silver badge

            Re: Light the fire

            Hardware stores?!?! What sort of gucci magic is this?

            Our stuff came from intercepting things that were being disposed of in the local community before being binned, a couple of bits that came from the local dump and offcuts from building materials (some nice, though small bits of wood and board) begged from a local builder. Tools were borrowed from parents and adults occasionally looked and what we'd done and (retrospectively speaking, did us a life extending) favour by replacing nails with nuts and bolts they had kicking around.

            Kids would never be able to do that these days; they'd have to talk to people. :/

            1. Anonymous Coward
              Anonymous Coward

              Re: Light the fire

              Also, no such thing as a dump in the uk anymore...

              1. Steve K
                Coat

                Re: Light the fire

                Also, no such thing as a dump in the uk anymore...

                Rubbish - I had one this morning. A big one, too.

                1. Anonymous Coward
                  Anonymous Coward

                  Re: Light the fire

                  Crap.

          2. Antron Argaiv Silver badge

            Re: Light the fire

            Buy?

    3. D.A.

      Re: Light the fire

      ‘Cos I neeeeeeeed... your love.

      Anyway, in our part of the world, go-carts were known as “bogies” (yes, really).

      1. werdsmith Silver badge

        Re: Light the fire

        Well that would be logical because that's what they are.

        Having grown up in a railway town, it makes perfect sense.

        bogie

        /ˈbəʊɡi/

        noun

        BRITISH

        an undercarriage with four or six wheels pivoted beneath the end of a railway vehicle.

        Also, see "Dolly".

        1. jake Silver badge

          Re: Light the fire

          Somewhere in this thread there might be a spleling error ...

          How do you get a kleenex to dance?

          Blow it a little boogie.

  3. wolfetone Silver badge

    Well I offered them £10, they said no. That's my dreams of a Concorde-powered Lada out the door.

    Ah well.

    1. Oh Matron!

      As it's for static use, it would fair well in a Lada :-)

      1. CrazyOldCatMan Silver badge

        As it's for static use, it would fair well in a Lada :-)

        Remember - *anything* will fly if you put enough energy behind it.. Yes, even a Lada.

        1. jake Silver badge

          To be fair ...

          ... if you put that much energy behind a Lada, it wouldn't be a Lada flying. It would be bits of a Lada flying.

  4. The Pi Man

    Need / Want

    I’m sure this has been kicking around for sale for a while. It falls into the category of ‘I didn’t realise I NEEDED it until knew it existed’

    1. Evil Auditor Silver badge
      Thumb Up

      Re: Need / Want

      Just checked the cash in my pocket and, equally unfortunately and unsurprisingly, it wouldn't buy that engine. It would hardly pay for the transport of that beast. But now I do know why I have a garage that is slightly oversized for cars: the Olympus easily fits in there and leaves more than enough space to work on it.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Need / Want

        Well, I did consider it as a lawn ornament but unfortunately we're on clay and getting the piling machine into the garden would be a bit inconvenient, it would involve knocking down a shed. Pity, it would have made for a very fast barbecue.

    2. Antron Argaiv Silver badge

      Re: Need / Want

      Definitely falls into the category of something you bring home while the wife is out shopping.

  5. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    "a certificate of authenticity"

    I'm trying to fully understand the implications of those 4 words. Like, can you buy cheap Concorde engine counterfeits from the back of a truck in a side alley? Guaranteed genuine by a shady looking character in a hood, cash-only, great discount if you also take the Saturn V booster just there?

    1. jonathan keith

      You could pick up "garanty orthentic" Olimpus engines three for ten dollars on any Hong Kong street corner back in the day.

      Well, I say pick up...

    2. macjules
      Paris Hilton

      Because its eBay and you just never know. The moment you buy it another "unique" engine appears on eBay.

      I wonder what they are going to do about Nigerian Advanced Fee Fraudsters .. "Please to be delivering engine to my father in Sydenham. I have sent you $1m via PayPal"?

    3. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      > I'm trying to fully understand the implications of those 4 words. Like, can you buy cheap Concorde engine counterfeits from the back of a truck in a side alley?

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tupolev_Tu-144>

    4. Wellyboot Silver badge

      It does seem a bit unlikely that any old Vulcan engine has been tarted up with an aftermarket afterburner! As the only other aicraft to fly with the afterburning Olympus were the TSR2 prototypes that it was originally designed for, any non Concorde engine will be a seriously rare beast.

      1. I ain't Spartacus Gold badge
        Happy

        Wellyboot,

        Good point.

        Anyone wanna buy an old TSR2 engine? I''ve got a certificate of authenticity and everything! Say a nice round £1m.

      2. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        The TSR.2 Olympus was a very different beast from the engine that powered Concorde, it would be difficult to get them mixed up.

        Have a look at the TSR.2 up at RAF Cosford museum, it has the engine and jetpipe/reheat assembly alongside. It's quite big...

        1. DragonBS16

          The Rolls Royce Olympus engines that were fitted to TSR.2 were Olympus 551 mk 320.

          The 551 was then further developed (in partnership with Snecma) through various models into the Olympus 593 through lots of derivations.

  6. imanidiot Silver badge
    Flame

    Makes me wonder

    How did the seller come into possession of the thing, and how much did THEY purchase it for? Seems like a museum piece, not something to be broken for being made into utter tat (because that's what all that "office memoribilia" and "furniture" is). The mere thought makes me want to scream.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Makes me wonder

      Indy, this ain't the Cross of Coronado.

    2. jonathan keith

      Re: Makes me wonder

      I'd love to see what previous items the seller's offered!

      1. TeeCee Gold badge
        Coat

        Re: Makes me wonder

        Bags of rocking horse manure and the main ion thruster off an Imperial StarDestroyer.

    3. Antron Argaiv Silver badge

      Re: Makes me wonder

      And, more importantly, what happened to the other three?

    4. Roland6 Silver badge

      Re: Makes me wonder

      Also its history does raise the question as to why it isn't in the Seattle Museum of Flight. Followed by the question as to the location of the other 3 engines from this airframe.

      1. DragonBS16

        Re: Makes me wonder

        67 Olympus 593 (mk 610) engines were produced for the production models of Concorde. Only 56 were ever fitted at any one time. The others were kept as (ready to fit) spares, or were being serviced.

        So, while this particular engine may have been fitted to Concorde 214 (and possibly other Concorde's as well), it's not been removed from 214 after she was taken to Seattle. The Concorde in Seattle still has all 4 of her engines fitted.

    5. tfewster
      Trollface

      Re: Makes me wonder

      > How did the seller come into possession of the thing...

      It fell off the back of an aircraft?

      (Too soon?)

  7. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    WTF does British Airways have a say in anything ?

    It's not like they ever paid for Concorde.

    Tell you what, I'll offer £2 ...

    1. Oh Matron!

      Re: WTF does British Airways have a say in anything ?

      Came here to ask the same thing. Are you buying from BA? No? Then, BA, Do One!

    2. Jon 37

      Re: WTF does British Airways have a say in anything ?

      It's BA's way of saying "we haven't maintained this the way we would a flight engine, so we don't think it's airworthy", and also "if you try to use it for flight anyway, and it breaks, don't sue us".

  8. werdsmith Silver badge

    Starting up a 1970s gas turbine with a 1970s FADEC or whatever they used then sounds fun. Switching on the reheat even more so. Just the fuel it would guzzle in a few seconds would be too cher pour moi.

    On an Anglo-french beast such as Concorde you can have reheat or postcombustion but not afterburners.

  9. Paul Johnson 1
    Go

    Way ahead of me

    Thats what I like about El Reg. I saw the sub-head about "static display only" and instantly thought I should post "yes, but that doesn't mean you couldn't fire it up". But no, you got there ahead of me.

  10. Michael H.F. Wilkinson Silver badge
    Pint

    I have this mental image

    (mental in more ways than one) of the BOFH getting his hands on this and using the afterburner as a creative way to get rid of evidence/beancounters/annoying users/the next boss, once he gets bored with windows.

    Icon, because it is getting seriously close to beer o'clock here

    1. I ain't Spartacus Gold badge
      Megaphone

      Re: I have this mental image

      It's not a very stealthy way to murder people... Admittedly you won't hear their, rather short-lived, screams - but it's not a quiet process. Also, a lot more expensive than taking a screwdriver to the window mechanism.

      1. imanidiot Silver badge

        Re: I have this mental image

        As opposed to all but announcing you threw them out the window as the entire company sees and hears him fall to his doom? Stealthy and quiet is not always the BOFHs MO.

    2. Antron Argaiv Silver badge
      Pirate

      Re: I have this mental image

      The afterburner?

      You are familiar with the chicken cannon, I assume?

  11. STOP_FORTH
    Happy

    RegSPBFunder

    Divide number of regular readers into £750k then put up a firewall. Easy peasy. Badged commentards pay double, natch.

    1. STOP_FORTH
      Facepalm

      Re: RegSPBFunder

      Um, paywall. Sorry.

  12. Paul Hovnanian Silver badge

    Repurpose into collectable pieces of furniture

    Fastest lawn chair on my block.

    1. I ain't Spartacus Gold badge

      Re: Repurpose into collectable pieces of furniture

      Fastest Darwin Award on your block too though...

      1. Mark 85

        Re: Repurpose into collectable pieces of furniture

        Fastest Darwin Award on your block too though...

        But what a way to go.....

  13. JimmyPage Silver badge
    Pint

    Which was the bigger engineering challenge ? Concorde. Or Apollo ?

    Bearing in mind some Apollo engineers said they were astounded by the air intake alone for Concorde.

    And it flew regularly with civilian passengers unlike the rather showy one-shot Apollo with it's highly trained crew.

    Although I'd be happy if we all put our handbags down and celebrated great engineering of the 20th century, whilst simultaneously weeping for the lack of development since then.

    These all round ->

    1. ma1010
      FAIL

      Re: Which was the bigger engineering challenge ? Concorde. Or Apollo ?

      What do you mean by lack of development?? After all we've got social media, the surveillance society, shiny iPhones and the Internet of Things! Who says there's no development these days??

      (Excuse me while I go vomit.)

      1. OldSoCalCoder

        Re: Which was the bigger engineering challenge ? Concorde. Or Apollo ?

        Don't forget bitcoin's contribution to the advancement of society as a whole. I mean, you've got like this number, and then it's secret, and...it's market cap is $150 billion...

        Sorry, off-topic.

        Count me in if we're ponying up $s to buy this thing before some asshole turns this into collectable coffee table "art".

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Which was the bigger engineering challenge ? Concorde. Or Apollo ?

      The reason that the Rockwell B-1B is generally subsonic, or at least not Mach 2 capable, is because the US couldn't get the original intake to work properly. They did ask for help from Ted Talbot who got the Concorde inlet to work, he said he thought that it would prove impossible because whereas a Concorde intake was only angled from top to bottom the B-1A intake was raked in 2 directions, top to bottom and side to side, making the control mechanism to keep the shockwave focused on the inlet lip too difficult for the computing power of the day.

      1. werdsmith Silver badge

        Re: Which was the bigger engineering challenge ? Concorde. Or Apollo ?

        Those intake ramps that shocked the supersonic airflow down to subsonic speed for the turbine, and it’s control computers, were one of the first things that were removed from the retired concordes. Such is still the secrecy about it.

      2. bazza Silver badge

        Re: Which was the bigger engineering challenge ? Concorde. Or Apollo ?

        I don’t know if it was Ted Talbot or another Concorde engineer, but a story I heard was that a chap was invited over to look at the B1A, have dinner, give a speech, etc.

        Unfortunately in his after dinner speech he commented that the B1A clearly was having intake problems, wasn’t going to get to M2 properly, all because the inlets were on the wrong way round.

        This was unfortunate because, although correct and astutely deduced merely from having had a brief tour of the development factory and seeing the prototype airframe, what he’d blurted out was classified Top Secret at the time. And now everyone, spouses included, knew it. Oops.

        Made quite an impression though!

        Concorde wasn't as fast as the SR71 / A12, but most people on board could drink champagne in shirt sleeves whilst moving at M2. SR71 pilots / RSOs didn't get to do that...

      3. Chairman of the Bored

        Re: Which was the bigger engineering challenge ? Concorde. Or Apollo ?

        Bad intakes? Close but not quite.

        Top speed of the B1-A prototypes were about 2.1 to 2.3 Mach at high altitude. B1-B, though, added the requirement of low level penetration and reduced RCS, as the USAF realized high speed / high altitude was useless against contemporary air defense systems. Hence the abandonment of the XB-70 (3+ Mach) bomber and the 2+ Mach B-58 Hustler, which was removed from service all the way back in 1970.

        Why is the B1-B slower than -1A? For RCS reduction, the B1-B ended up with fixed vice variable intake ramps instead of the variable ramps of -1A and a serpentine duct that prevents any direct line of sight to the fan face. Limits speed to something like 1.2 Mach... But then, it can go 0.92 Mach on the deck, which is damned impressive. Above 1.2Mach, supposedly the intake serpentine can incur damage.

        Basically, a nice, hot 3+ Mach aircraft at altitude is a hell of a missile sponge. And you're not outrunning any missiles. Survival involves terrain masking and RCS reduction, not peak speed.

    3. bazza Silver badge
      Pint

      Re: Which was the bigger engineering challenge ? Concorde. Or Apollo ?

      Which was the bigger engineering challenge? Hard to say, they were both very different endeavours.

      Where they are perhaps equal though is that both programmes brought in new ways of working. NASA did an awful lot of stuff around the art of Systems Engineering and engineering practises in general, changing the way in which things were done. The Concorde programme got the whole idea of geographically dispersed development and production off the ground, ultimately leading to Airbus and now also copied by Boeing and other industries. So amongst their more obvious, tangible achievements, both these programmes have changed how we do things for the better.

      Beers owed, methinks.

      1. jake Silver badge

        Re: Which was the bigger engineering challenge ? Concorde. Or Apollo ?

        "The Concorde programme got the whole idea of geographically dispersed development and production off the ground"

        Might want to look into how and when Apollo was built.

  14. dak

    We have one of those in the office

    It's complete with its yellow trolley and sits next to the Concorde café.

    Guess what's hanging from the roof in the Lightning café...

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: We have one of those in the office

      A cable for an Apple product?

    2. dajames
      Trollface

      Re: We have one of those in the office

      Guess what's hanging from the roof in the Lightning café...

      A Van de Graaff generator?

      No ... too obvious ...

    3. molletts
      Coat

      Does the Concorde Café have a self-service counter? Is it called the Mach Buffet?

  15. Marty McFly Silver badge
    Holmes

    Seattle

    Methinks the Museum of Flight in Seattle would like this to go along with their bird. However, someone has an inflated sense of value and thinks they should be able to retire independently wealthy on this eBay auction.

    The fundamental problem with high-value collector items is you need a deep-pocket collector - and those are very hard to find.

  16. applebyJedi

    Why?

    Why is this in Seattle, it’s British/French. Can we swap it for the Elgin Marbles?

  17. Lucy in the Sky (with Diamonds)

    So close, yet so out of reach...

    In November of 2001, I was passing through Heathrow, and thanks to 911 (sounds like a Porsche thing) I was meant to be there three hours prior to boarding, but due to my limited finances I have taken the tube from Greenwich with a large suitcase that made my fellow tube-travellers give me some rather nasty looks, and taken somewhat longer the expected.

    By the time I got there, check-in luggage time has passed, but the nice folk at the counter told me, I can take my suitcase as carry-on luggage past the gate, then they’ll put it in the hold. Now, this resulted in them confiscating a lovely three inch nail-file but due to lack of time, they stopped searching and let me keep my foot-long Philips, which I treasure to the present day.

    By now, I was so late, that the plane has already pushed off from the terminal, and me and a few others were made to walk to the plane on the tarmac. It was only a few hundred metres, but on my right, there were three Concordes parked side by side, I was passing only a few meters away, they were sexy as expected and I could not keep my eyes off them, yet after personally holding Heathrow up, I did not have the nerve to ask if we could stop so I can take a few pictures. This was as close as I have ever got to the cute little buggers.

    1. The Pi Man

      Re: So close, yet so out of reach...

      When they were shutting down the Concorde program I saw the short flights advertised and they really weren’t much money. I regret being young and not foolish with money.

    2. Sven Coenye
      Happy

      Re: So close, yet so out of reach...

      Growing up, Concorde made 2 ambassador flights to my local airport (Oostende).2nd time i was old enough to go see it on my own, The first thing of note was that it came with an Air France-liveried Renault R4 carrying a spare tire for the tail landing gear.

      The crowd control barriers were only arms length from the undercarriage. When time came to depart, the ground crew pushed the barriers back to barely outside the intake line of the engines. I was standing under the left wingtip when the engines started spooling up. (Glorious days :-) Can't image that happening these days...)

      1. bpfh

        Re: So close, yet so out of reach...

        I’ve seen a couple in museums over the years, one in Somerset, 2 in Le Bourget and the Air France gate guardian at CDG airport, but I was also lucky enough in 1999 to be working for a pharmaceutical supplier based on the Châteauroux airport complex and Concorde flew down to the maintenance centre there, and we got a free tour airside, with just some steel fencing around the landing gear. The noise the next morning when it blasted off the runway was bloody epic - even from inside the office buildings. We got used to hearing wide bodies come and go, but someone turned the volume up to 11 when that bird went. As I was inside I have to rate that one as a close second to the sound of the Vulcan and Typhoon displays over Herne Bay a couple of years ago.

  18. jake Silver badge
    Pint

    Bang for the buck

    On the other hand, you could purchase a Merlin engine ... which has the added advantage of easily being fitted to the road-going vehicle of your choice. For interesting values of easily, of course. Don't forget to beef up the suspension, and the drivetrain ... Maybe it'd be easier to put into your boat. (I'd include links, but I'm sure you can dig up video for yourself).

    I've seen 'em sold for under $10,000 in running condition (not flyable!). Shipping and handling extra. Might want to make certain the .sig-other is off shopping and hide it in the garage when it's delivered. Check you local noise ordinances before firing it up ... and please, call me! Firing these things up never gets old. I'll bring the beer :-)

  19. Francis Boyle Silver badge

    "may not post to Australia"

    Dammit, that's me out. Oh well, I've always preferred Spitfires myself. I wonder if that guy in the US with all the Merlin parts does postage to Australia.

  20. mickm

    RN Olympus

    The Royal Navy must have owned hundreds of Olympus engines over the years and the training Oympus was I believe still operational in HMS Sultan until around 2009. They were used in at least the Type 21, 22. 42 and the Invincible class possibly others.

    Probably all sold for the scrap value!!

    1. a_builder

      Re: RN Olympus

      That would be the Olympus derived gas turbine. Not quite the same as the jet engine although did share lineage.

      I thought it was a Tyne GT at Sultan?

  21. Stuart Castle Silver badge

    I love the attitude. Typical old hardware engineer. “If it works, I’ll use it. If it’s dangerous, I’ll wear overalls and safety glasses, but I’ll use it”. Reminds me of an electronics engineer I used to share an office with. I’d frequently hear a small explosion (and sometimes not so small) only to see him appear from behind his latest project saying “well, that wasn’t supposed to happen”, but he was handy if and when we needed anything designing. Give him a spec, and an hour or so later, you’d have some device to,solve your problem,

    That said, he frequently had dangerous stuff in his part of the office. I remember one day I picked up a large metal tube with what appeared to be a mains cable attached to one end. It was a rather large laser. I don’t know how or where he got it, but it was apparently large enough I would have needed to be licensed to use it.

  22. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Anybody seen the crew from Salvage Squad (uk) recently?

    Put them together with Guy Martin and an Olympus engine (not really fussed which one) and I'd watch. I'd probably even pay :)

    Further Concorde/Olympus reading:

    https://www.heritageconcorde.com/concorde-olympus-593-mk610-engines

    There probably wouldn't be any airworthiness worries either as, according to today's news, BunglingBoris's puppetmasters apparently want the UK out of EASA:

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-51783580

    1. Steve K

      Re: Anybody seen the crew from Salvage Squad (uk) recently?

      Donate it to the Bloodhound team.....?

      They need everything they can get at the moment

  23. Luiz Abdala

    This is the kind of engine...

    ... that needs a V8 with 500 HP just to get it turning...

    Just out of curiosity...

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rolls-Royce/Snecma_Olympus_593

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