The way forward for the future of supersonic flying.
See more of our trusted coverage when you search. Prefer Newsweek on Google to see more of our trusted coverage when you search. American Airlines has become the latest carrier to buy into the dream ...
Boom Supersonic’s development efforts are picking up speed, with the ambitious Colorado-based firm revealing on 23 July that it has completed design of its Overture airliner’s flightdeck and that its ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Charlotte-based reporter Ted Reed covers airlines and airline labor. While Boom Supersonic continues to promise delivery of its ...
Boom Supersonic has always said that its Overture, designed to carry from 65 to 80 passengers, will travel at Mach 1.7, or about 1,300 miles per hour, at 60,000 feet. At those speeds, it will be able ...
Boom Supersonic has publicly unveiled its XB-1 supersonic aircraft, a demonstrator Boom will use to develop a future supersonic passenger aircraft called Overture. The Denver-based company revealed XB ...
FARNBOROUGH—Supersonic airliner developer Boom has unveiled the refined configuration of its Mach 1.7 Overture passenger design and, at the same time, announced a partnership with Northrop Grumman to ...
At the Paris Air Show, Boom announced significant advances on Overture, the world’s fastest airliner — optimized for speed, safety, and sustainability — including milestones for its Symphony™ engine.
Meet Blake Scholl, the Elon Musk of air travel who is determined to get the world back on supersonic passenger jets John Arlidge is an aviation expert who has flown more miles, on more airlines, on ...