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Soviet SST wings its way to Internet For sale: Soviet-built supersonic Tu-144 jetliner. Top speed 1,650 mph (2,673 kph), seats 135. Low miles. Price US$10 million or best offer. The plane is nearly 20 years old, but was fully refurbished for high-speed flight testing by NASA four years ago and would make a stunning executive jet or, more realistically, a spectacular flying billboard for corporate advertisers. "It could go to a person who likes to own the fastest car or it could be used by a cola company who wants a marketing effort with global reach," said Randall Stephens, a Texas aviation expert working with Russian jet maker Tupolev to sell the jet. Nicknamed "Concordsky" because it closely resembled the Concorde built simultaneously by Britain and France in the late 1960s, the Soviet jet holds 35 more passengers and flies about 5 percent faster than its cousin. But the Tu-144 was too noisy and inefficient for even the Soviet airline Aeroflot Yet NASA found the price was right to lease a Tu-144 for over 300 hours of flight testing, three times what it had flown previously, and replaced its four old out-of-production engines with powerplants borrowed from a Tu-160 supersonic bomber. Boeing, which announced plans for a near-sonic speed jet earlier this year, participated in the flight tests and probably got some good ideas along the way, experts said. With the upgrades and flight testing costing about US$35 million, the US$10 million Tu-144 asking price is a steal, said Paul Duffy, an Irish aviation consultant. "For US$10 million you could probably buy a 12-year-old Boeing EBAY GETS COLD FEET Stephens posted the jet for sale on Internet auction house Ebay Inc. Ebay would earn US$125,000 if the jet sold for US$10 million, nearly 10 times the next most expensive Ebay sales + a Kentucky resort and a famous baseball card, a spokesman said. Undaunted, Stephens has posted the Tu-144 for sale on his own website, (http://www.tejavia.com), and says he and Tupolev can provide maintenance and spare parts and operate the airplane for prospective customers. For Stephens, the commercial project also represents his faith in the people and technology of the failed Soviet empire and his desire to forge closer ties between the onetime Cold War enemies by marketing other Russian planes. "I believe in capitalism and I believe in the possibility of us working together. I find people over there feel the same way," Stephens said. "Russians are a tenacious, long-suffering people and the people on the street actually like us." The cost of operating the Tu-144 could prove prohibitive, experts say. The Concorde, undergoing a make-over after crashing for the first time near Paris last summer, is more efficient than the Tu-144. But airlines still charge thousands of dollars for a one-way transatlantic trip at twice the speed of sound. "A blimp or a Boeing 727 would be much cheaper and present fewer regulatory worries as a flying billboard," said Richard Aboulafia at Virginia aviation consultancy Teal Group. "The Tupolev 144 has baggage, including the most spectacular disaster at an air show in recent memory." Recent reports suggest French fighter jets, equipped with cameras to snap photos of the Concorde competitor, actually caused the Tu-144 crash by swooping too close, forcing the Soviet jet into a steep climb well outside its design limits. But regardless of the cause, the jet's lousy track record could be its own worst enemy. "It's a piece of junk," said Colorado aviation consultant Mike Boyd. "You don't want be seen in it or around it." NOSTALGIA OR REAL VALUE? Western manufacturers like Boeing have sifted through the rubble of the Communist Soviet economy to find inexpensive technology and engineering talent and put them to work researching or operating commercial projects. Boeing officials privately marvel at the advanced Russian jet designs that rivaled Western ones on smaller budgets. But public perception of Iron Curtain engineering could hardly be worse with memories of the nuclear reactor explosion at Chernobyl and the sinking of Russia's Kursk nuclear submarine last year still fresh in many people's minds. And just this month Russian space officials reportedly got US$20 million from Dennis Tito to make him the world's first space tourist, subsidizing their share of the International Space Station, but angering their NASA counterparts. Ever optimistic, Stephens insists the Tu-144 will fly once more, a tribute to the human obsession with superfast flight. "Even 30 years later, people still still stop and stare open-mouthed when the Concorde takes off," Stephens said. "This is going to be a great advertising medium." |
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